| Literature DB >> 29255945 |
Simone Kühn1,2, Sandra Düzel3, Lorenza Colzato4, Kristina Norman5, Jürgen Gallinat6, Andreas M Brandmaier3, Ulman Lindenberger3, Keith F Widaman7.
Abstract
The fact that tyrosine increases dopamine availability that, in turn, may enhance cognitive performance has led to numerous studies on healthy young participants taking tyrosine as a food supplement. As a result of this dietary intervention, participants show performance increases in working memory and executive functions. However, the potential association between habitual dietary tyrosine intake and cognitive performance has not been investigated to date. The present study aims at clarifying the association of episodic memory (EM), working memory (WM) and fluid intelligence (Gf), and tyrosine intake in younger and older adults. To this end, we acquired habitual tyrosine intake (food frequency questionnaire) from 1724 participants of the Berlin Aging Study II (1383 older adults, 341 younger adults) and modelled its relations to cognitive performance assessed in a broad battery of cognitive tasks using structural equation modeling. We observed a significant association between tyrosine intake and the latent factor capturing WM, Gf, and EM in the younger and the older sample. Due to partial strong factorial invariance between age groups for a confirmatory factor analysis on cognitive performance, we were able to compare the relationship between tyrosine and cognition between age groups and found no difference. Above and beyond previous studies on tyrosine food supplementation the present result extend this to a cross-sectional association between habitual tyrosine intake levels in daily nutrition and cognitive performance (WM, Gf, and EM). This corroborates nutritional recommendations that are thus far derived from single-dose administration studies.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29255945 PMCID: PMC6647184 DOI: 10.1007/s00426-017-0957-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Res ISSN: 0340-0727
Fig. 1Simplified illustration of the structural equation model depicting effects of tyrosine (Tyr) on the latent cognitive factors for working memory (WM), episodic memory (EM), and fluid intelligence (Gf). For each path, the top number is for the young adult group and the bottom number is for the older adult group. Numbers next to single-headed solid arrows represent significant regression coefficients. Numbers next to double-headed arrows represent standardized variances or covariances. *p < 0.001. †p = 0.02
Group differences in cognitive performance between the two age groups
| Cognitive task | Younger participants mean (SD) | Older participants mean (SD) | Group difference ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Letter updating (LU) | 46.96 (9.80) | 38.78 (11.37) | 13.24** |
| Number-N-back (NB) | 0.89 (0.13) | 0.68 (0.18) | 24.60** |
| Spatial updating (SU) | 33.24 (6.79) | 20.77 (9.42) | 27.74** |
| Verbal learning and memory test (LI) | 12.13 (2.09) | 8.48 (2.69) | 27.05** |
| Face profession (FP) | 0.55 (0.19) | 0.26 (0.14) | 23.91** |
| Scene encoding (SE) | 0.38 (0.15) | 0.28 (0.14) | 12.15** |
| Figural analogies (FA) | 17.15 (3.19) | 11.52 (5.17) | 25.18** |
| Letter series (LS) | 16.19 (4.97) | 9.04 (6.30) | 22.30** |
| Practical problems (PP) | 12.45 (2.88) | 10.29 (2.76) | 12.49** |
**p < 0.001
Multiple-group confirmatory factor analysis for nine cognitive performance variables for young and older adults
| Variable | Intercept | Factor loadings | Unique variance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WM | EM | Gf | Young | Old | ||
| Letter updating | 46.9 (0.51)a | 5.70 (0.37) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.0c (0.00) | 53.8 (4.84) | 77.9 (3.59) |
| Number-N-back | 0.89 (0.01) | 0.09 (0.01) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.01 (0.001) | 0.02 (0.001) |
| Spatial updating | 33.2 (0.37) | 5.08 (0.29) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.0c (0.00) | 24.9 (2.51) | 44.0 (2.26) |
| VLMTb | 12.1 (0.11) | 0.0c (0.00) | 1.38 (0.11) | 0.0c (0.00) | 2.35 (0.28) | 5.02 (0.25) |
| Face profession | 0.54 (0.01) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.10 (0.01) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.03 (0.003) | 0.03 (0.001) |
| Scene encoding | 0.40 (0.01) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.05 (0.01) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.02 (0.002) | 0.02 (0.001) |
| Figural analogies | 17.1 (0.18) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.0c (0.00) | 2.57 (0.15) | 4.63 (0.53) | 11.3 (0.61) |
| Letter series | 16.2 (0.24) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.0c (0.00) | 3.28 (0.19) | 11.2 (1.09) | 16.3 (0.93) |
| Practical problems | 12.4 (0.11) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.0c (0.00) | 0.99 (0.07) | 7.16 (0.56) | 5.50 (0.23) |
Tabled values are parameter estimates, with standard errors in parentheses. All parameter estimates had critical ratios > 5.8, so were significant at p < 0.0001. In factor covariance matrices, factor variances are on the diagonal, and covariances are shown below the diagonal and correlations above the diagonal
aIntercept for older adult sample = 52.7 (SE = 0.75)
bVLMT verbal learning and memory test
cValues fixed at reported values to identify model
Standardized regression weights when regressing ability factors on covariates, food intake, and tyrosine: by sample
| Sample | Predictor | Ability factor | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gf | WM | EM | ||
| Young | Sex | − 0.10 (0.07) | − 0.17 (0.07) | − 0.29 (0.07) |
| Education | 0.18 (0.06) | 0.16 (0.06) | 0.15 (0.07) | |
| Age | − 0.02 (0.05) | 0.01 (0.05) | − 0.14 (0.06) | |
| Food intake | − 0.16 (0.05) | − 0.18 (0.05) | − 0.13 (0.05) | |
| Tyrosine | 0.26 (0.07) | 0.23 (0.07) | 0.17 (0.07) | |
|
| 0.06 | 0.06 | 0.13 | |
| Older | Sex | 0.05 (0.03) | 0.04 (0.03) | − 0.19 (0.04) |
| Education | 0.39 (0.03) | 0.31 (0.03) | 0.35 (0.04) | |
| Age | − 0.16 (0.02) | − 0.15 (0.02) | − 0.25 (0.03) | |
| Food intake | − 0.11 (0.04) | − 0.12 (0.04) | − 0.12 (0.05) | |
| Tyrosine | 0.13 (0.04) | 0.12 (0.04) | 0.11 (0.05) | |
|
| 0.21 | 0.14 | 0.21 | |
Total N = 1728; n young = 343, n older = 1385. Tabled values are standardized regression weights, with standard errors in parentheses, and the explained variance, R2, for each factor
Gf fluid intelligence, WM working memory, EM episodic memory