Literature DB >> 29772378

A task-invariant cognitive reserve network.

Yaakov Stern1, Yunglin Gazes2, Qolomreza Razlighi3, Jason Steffener4, Christian Habeck5.   

Abstract

The concept of cognitive reserve (CR) can explain individual differences in susceptibility to cognitive or functional impairment in the presence of age or disease-related brain changes. Epidemiologic evidence indicates that CR helps maintain performance in the face of pathology across multiple cognitive domains. We therefore tried to identify a single, "task-invariant" CR network that is active during the performance of many disparate tasks. In imaging data acquired from 255 individuals age 20-80 while performing 12 different cognitive tasks, we used an iterative approach to derive a multivariate network that was expressed during the performance of all tasks, and whose degree of expression correlated with IQ, a proxy for CR. When applied to held out data or forward applied to fMRI data from an entirely different activation task, network expression correlated with IQ. Expression of the CR pattern accounted for additional variance in fluid reasoning performance over and above the influence of cortical thickness, and also moderated between cortical thickness and reasoning performance, consistent with the behavior of a CR network. The identification of a task-invariant CR network supports the idea that life experiences may result in brain processing differences that might provide reserve against age- or disease-related changes across multiple tasks.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cognitive aging; Cortical thickness; IQ; Multivariate imaging analysis; fMRI

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29772378      PMCID: PMC6409097          DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.05.033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  41 in total

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4.  Decomposing adult age differences in symbol arithmetic.

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9.  Neuroimaging explanations of age-related differences in task performance.

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10.  The role of education and verbal abilities in altering the effect of age-related gray matter differences on cognition.

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  35 in total

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7.  Maintenance, reserve and compensation: the cognitive neuroscience of healthy ageing.

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8.  Brain-predicted age difference score is related to specific cognitive functions: a multi-site replication analysis.

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Review 9.  The Role of Cognitive Reserve in Alzheimer's Disease and Aging: A Multi-Modal Imaging Review.

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