| Literature DB >> 24180676 |
R Chowdhury1, T Sharot2, T Wolfe1, E Düzel1, R J Dolan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthy older adults report greater well-being and life satisfaction than their younger counterparts. One potential explanation for this is enhanced optimism. We tested the influence of age on optimistic and pessimistic beliefs about the future and the associated structural neural correlates.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24180676 PMCID: PMC4035755 DOI: 10.1017/S0033291713002602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Med ISSN: 0033-2917 Impact factor: 7.723
Fig. 1.Task design. (a) On each trial, participants were presented with one of 45 adverse life events and asked to estimate how likely this event was to occur to them in the next 5 years. They were then presented with the average probability of that event occurring to a person similar to themselves in the same sociocultural environment. For each event an estimation error was calculated as the difference between the participants' estimation and the average probability provided. The second session was the same as the first session. (b) For each event, an update was calculated as the difference between the participants' first and second estimations. If the participants' first estimate was higher than the average probability provided, that trial was classified as ‘desirable’ because the information presented was better than expected, calling for an adjustment in an optimistic direction. (c) If the participants' first estimate was lower than the average probability provided, that trial was classified as ‘undesirable’ because the information presented was worse than expected, calling for an adjustment in a pessimistic direction.
Fig. 2.Age comparison of belief updating. Both young and older adults updated their beliefs (difference between first and second estimate) more when faced with desirable than undesirable information, but this update bias was larger in older adults due to reduced updating of undesirable information. n = 18 both groups. Bars ±1 s.e.m. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.0005.
Correlation coefficients (Pearson's correlations) for the correlation between dorsal and ventral subregions of anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) grey matter volume and update bias (desirable update minus undesirable update)
| Older adults | Young adults | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dorsal ACC | 0.649, 0.526 | 0.004*, 0.044 | 0.122, 0.057 | 0.631, 0.841 |
| Ventral ACC | 0.626, 0.504 | 0.005*, 0.056 | 0.213, 0.262 | 0.395, 0.345 |
r = Pearson's correlation coefficient (first value in cell) and partial Pearson's correlation coefficient controlling for age, gender and total intracranial volume (second value in the same cell of the table). p = corresponding significance value, *p < 0.0125.
Fig. 3.Region of interest (ROI) analysis of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). Scatter plots show higher volume of the dorsal ACC (green mask) and ventral ACC (red mask) in older adults correlated with higher update bias (desirable update minus undesirable update) in older adults. No significant correlations were observed in young adults. n = 18 for each age group. * Fisher's r to z transformation comparing correlation strengths p < 0.05.