Publications 2017

Differences in Cortical Sources of the Event-Related P3 Potential Between Young and Old Participants Indicate Frontal Compensation


The  event-related  P3  potential,  as  elicited in  auditory  signal  detection  tasks,  originates  from  neural  activity  of  multiple  cortical  structures  and  presumably reflects an overlap of several cognitive processes. The fact that the P3 is affected by aging makes it a potential metric for  age-related  cognitive  change.  The  P3  in  older  participants is thought to encompass frontal compensatory activity in addition to task-related processes. The current study investigates this by decomposing the P3 using group independent  component  analysis  (ICA).  Independent  components (IC) of young and old participants were compared in order to investigate the effects of aging. Exact low-resolution tomography analysis (eLORETA) was used to compare current source densities between young and old participants for  the  P3-ICs  to  localize  differences  in  cortical  source activity  for  every  IC.  One  of  the  P3-related  ICs  reflected a different constellation of cortical generators in older participants compared to younger participants, suggesting that this P3-IC reflects shifts in neural activations and compensatory  processes  with  aging.  This  P3-IC  was  localized  to the orbitofrontal/temporal, and the medio-parietal regions. For this IC, older participants showed more frontal activation and less parietal activation as measured on the scalp. The  differences  in  cortical  sources  were  localized  in  the precentral  gyrus  and  the  parahippocampal  gyrus.  This finding might reflect compensatory activity recruited from these cortical sources during a signal detection task.

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