Literature DB >> 18482717

Modality-specificity of sensory aging in vision and audition: evidence from event-related potentials.

R Ceponiene1, M Westerfield, M Torki, J Townsend.   

Abstract

Major accounts of aging implicate changes in processing external stimulus information. Little is known about differential effects of auditory and visual sensory aging, and the mechanisms of sensory aging are still poorly understood. Using event-related potentials (ERPs) elicited by unattended stimuli in younger (M=25.5 yrs) and older (M=71.3 yrs) subjects, this study examined mechanisms of sensory aging under minimized attention conditions. Auditory and visual modalities were examined to address modality-specificity vs. generality of sensory aging. Between-modality differences were robust. The earlier-latency responses (P1, N1) were unaffected in the auditory modality but were diminished in the visual modality. The auditory N2 and early visual N2 were diminished. Two similarities between the modalities were age-related enhancements in the late P2 range and positive behavior-early N2 correlation, the latter suggesting that N2 may reflect long-latency inhibition of irrelevant stimuli. Since there is no evidence for salient differences in neuro-biological aging between the two sensory regions, the observed between-modality differences are best explained by the differential reliance of auditory and visual systems on attention. Visual sensory processing relies on facilitation by visuo-spatial attention, withdrawal of which appears to be more disadvantageous in older populations. In contrast, auditory processing is equipped with powerful inhibitory capacities. However, when the whole auditory modality is unattended, thalamo-cortical gating deficits may not manifest in the elderly. In contrast, ERP indices of longer-latency, stimulus-level inhibitory modulation appear to diminish with age.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18482717     DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2008.02.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res        ISSN: 0006-8993            Impact factor:   3.252


  35 in total

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5.  EyeCatch: data-mining over half a million EEG independent components to construct a fully-automated eye-component detector.

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Review 7.  The development of the N1 and N2 components in auditory oddball paradigms: a systematic review with narrative analysis and suggested normative values.

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8.  Aging Impairs Temporal Sensitivity, but not Perceptual Synchrony, Across Modalities.

Authors:  Alexandra N Scurry; Tiziana Vercillo; Alexis Nicholson; Michael Webster; Fang Jiang
Journal:  Multisens Res       Date:  2019-01-01       Impact factor: 2.286

9.  The impact of visual acuity on age-related differences in neural markers of early visual processing.

Authors:  Kirk R Daffner; Anna E Haring; Brittany R Alperin; Tatyana Y Zhuravleva; Katherine K Mott; Phillip J Holcomb
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10.  Age-related delay in information accrual for faces: evidence from a parametric, single-trial EEG approach.

Authors:  Guillaume A Rousselet; Jesse S Husk; Cyril R Pernet; Carl M Gaspar; Patrick J Bennett; Allison B Sekuler
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2009-09-09       Impact factor: 3.288

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