| Literature DB >> 29900396 |
Chandramallika Basak1,2, Shuo Qin1,2, Kaoru Nashiro3, Margaret A O'Connell1,2.
Abstract
The data presented in this article is related to the research article entitled "Age-related Differences in BOLD Modulation to Cognitive Control Costs in a Multitasking Paradigm: Global Switch, Local Switch, and Compatibility-Switch Costs" (Nashiro et al., 2018) [1]. This article describes age-related differences in accuracies for various cognitive costs incurred during task switching across three different age-cohorts: younger (18-35 years), younger-old (50-64 years) and older-old (65-80 years). The cognitive costs evaluated were global switch costs (GSC), local switch costs (LSC) and compatibility switch costs (CSC). Whole brain analyses were conducted to determine the brain regions sensitive to these cognitive costs, irrespective of age. Furthermore, age-related differences in brain-behavior relationships were evaluated by correlating activations from these regions with global switch costs, indexed by both response times and accuracies, for younger and older adults separately. Activations of age-sensitive regions during the task, where younger adults activated more than the combined groups of older adults, were also correlated with response times and accuracies to determine age-related differences in brain-behavior relationships of these under-recruited brain regions by older adults.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29900396 PMCID: PMC5997903 DOI: 10.1016/j.dib.2018.05.059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Data Brief ISSN: 2352-3409
Brain regions associated with GSC and LSC based on whole brain analysis in the overall sample, after controlling for age effects.
| GSC | Dual > Single | L | Middle Frontal Gyrus | − 30 | 6 | 56 | 3.48 | 1 | 248 |
| L | Middle Frontal Gyrus | − 32 | 2 | 54 | 3.46 | 1 | |||
| L | Precentral Gyrus | − 32 | − 4 | 50 | 3.33 | 1 | |||
| R | Paracingulate Gyrus | 6 | 14 | 50 | 4.09 | 2 | 474 | ||
| L | Paracingulate Gyrus | − 4 | 18 | 48 | 3.63 | 2 | |||
| R | Paracingulate Gyrus | 10 | 22 | 46 | 3.48 | 2 | |||
| R | Middle Temporal Gyrus | 58 | −48 | − 10 | 3.54 | 3 | 607 | ||
| R | Middle Temporal Gyrus | 42 | − 32 | − 6 | 3.43 | 3 | |||
| R | Inferior Temporal Gyrus | 54 | − 34 | −12 | 3.36 | 3 | |||
| R | Middle Frontal Gyrus | 46 | 22 | 36 | 3.97 | 4 | 1494 | ||
| R | Frontal Pole | 32 | 44 | 2 | 3.83 | 4 | |||
| R | Frontal Pole | 38 | 40 | 34 | 3.79 | 4 | |||
| L | Precentral Gyrus | − 42 | 6 | 32 | 5.88 | 5 | 14,784 | ||
| L | Supramarginal Gyrus | − 48 | − 46 | 44 | 5.52 | 5 | |||
| L | Lateral Occipital Cortex | − 32 | − 68 | 46 | 5.21 | 5 | |||
| LSC | SW > NS | R | Postcentral Gyrus | 40 | − 28 | 54 | 3.39 | 1 | 241 |
| R | Postcentral Gyrus | 48 | − 18 | 50 | 3.14 | 1 | |||
| R | Precentral Gyrus | 36 | − 22 | 52 | 3.09 | 1 | |||
Fig. 1Age-group × condition (Dual vs. Single) interactions were non-significant in all five GSC-sensitive brain regions: left middle frontal gyrus, bilateral paracingulate gyrus, right middle temporal gyrus, right middle frontal gyrus, and bilateral fronto-parietal cluster.
Fig. 2Age-group differences in age-sensitive regions (younger > older contrast) for different types of cognitive control mechanisms. A) Left Insula: non signifiicant age-group × condition (Dual > Single) interaction. B) Left Insula: non significant age-group x condition (NS vs. SW) interaction were significant for the left insula. C) Left:Insula: significant age-group and condition (Incomp vs. Comp) interaction. D) Bilateral frontal pole/SFG: significant age-group × condition (dual vs. single) interaction. E) Bilateral frontal pole/SFG: non significant age-group × condition (NS vs. SW) interaction. F) Bilateral frontal pole/SFG: non significant age-group × condition (Incomp vs. comp) interaction.
GSC-sensitive brain regions (from Dual > Single contrast) associated with Dual accuracy in older adults, resulting from whole brain correlation analysis.
| L | Precentral Gyrus | − 42 | 8 | 30 | 3.61 | 1 | 254 | 17.8* |
| L | Middle Frontal Gyrus | − 48 | 10 | 34 | 3.24 | 1 | ||
| L | Inferior Frontal Gyrus | − 54 | 12 | 26 | 2.98 | 1 | ||
| L | Frontal Pole | − 40 | 44 | 18 | 3.65 | 2 | 281 | 37.13* |
| L | Middle Frontal Gyrus | − 46 | 22 | 30 | 3.44 | 2 | ||
| L | Inferior Frontal Gyrus | − 26 | 34 | 10 | 3.21 | 2 | ||
| L | Precuneous | − 6 | − 70 | 46 | 3.54 | 3 | 467 | 19.69* |
| L | Precuneous | 0 | − 72 | 46 | 3.44 | 3 | ||
| R | Precuneous | 18 | − 74 | 48 | 3.17 | 3 | ||
| R | Cerebellum | 2 | − 76 | − 28 | 3.56 | 4 | 469 | 11.46 |
| R | Cerebellum | 2 | − 80 | − 28 | 3.52 | 4 | ||
| R | Cerebellum | 4 | − 74 | − 40 | 3.31 | 4 | ||
| R | Cerebellum | 34 | − 74 | − 20 | 3.95 | 5 | 674 | 4.73 |
| R | Cerebellum | 28 | − 70 | − 30 | 3.8 | 5 | ||
| R | Cerebellum | 36 | − 56 | − 24 | 3.67 | 5 | ||
| R | Middle Frontal Gyrus | 46 | 24 | 36 | 4.08 | 6 | 874 | 7.9 |
| R | Inferior Frontal Gyrus | 52 | 16 | 28 | 3.45 | 6 | ||
| R | Middle Frontal Gyrus | 46 | 28 | 26 | 3.42 | 6 | ||
| L | Lateral Occipital Cortex | − 36 | − 68 | 44 | 3.89 | 7 | 1116 | 67.72* |
| L | Superior Parietal Lobule | − 30 | − 52 | 42 | 3.83 | 7 | ||
| L | Lateral Occipital Cortex | − 30 | − 62 | 46 | 3.65 | 7 | ||
Note. F denote the condition main effect F statistic from repeated measures ANOVA. All F statistics were significant at p < .05, * denotes p < .001.
Mean accuracy (SD) for the five trial types for each age group.
| Trial-Type | Young | Younger-Old | Older-Old |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single | 0.97 (.01) | 0.97 (.01) | 0.96 (.04) |
| NS_Comp | 1.00 (.01) | 0.99 (.02) | 0.99 (.03) |
| S_Comp | 0.95 (.05) | 0.86 (.20) | 0.92 (.15) |
| NS_Incomp | 0.99 (.02) | 1.00 (.01) | 0.99 (.02) |
| S_Incomp | 0.95 (.08) | 0.83 (.21) | 0.89 (.16) |
Fig. 3Brain-Behavior correlations between the percent signal change for the global switch cost-sensitive regions and accuracies in the corresponding blocks (i.e., Single and Dual). (A) Left medial frontal gyrus. (B) Bilateral paracingulate gyrus. (C) Left fronto-parietal cluster.
Fig. 4Brain-Behavior correlations between the percent signal change for the age-sensitive regions under-recruited in older adults and accuracies in the Single and Dual blocks. (A) Right superior frontal gyrus. (B) Bilateral paracingulate gyrus.
Fig. 5A) GSC sensitive brain regions that were significantly predicted by Dual accuracy in older adults. B) Age-group differences in these regions across single and dual task blocks. There were no significant effects of age-group or age-group × condition interactions for any of these 7 regions. The main effect of condition (Dual vs. Single) was significant for all regions. C) Correlations between activations of these GSC sensitive brain regions and Dual accuracy in younger adults only.
| Psychology | |
| Cognitive Neuroscience | |
| Text file, Figures, Graphs | |
| Behavioral and imaging data were obtained using a Philips Achieva 3T MR scanner (Philips Medical Systems, Andover, MA, USA) with a 32-channel head coil. | |
| Analyzed | |
| The between-subjects factor was either age-group (younger, older) or group (younger, younger-old, older-old), and the within-subjects factor was trial-type (Single, NS-comp, NS-incomp, SW-comp, SW-incomp) in ANOVAs. Except for Single, all other trial-types were obtained from Dual blocks. For the brain-behavior correlations, ROIs that were sensitive to two different type of cognitive costs, viz., Global Switch Cost (GSC) and Local Switch Cost (LSC), were first obtained, irrespective of age. The percent signal change from these ROIs were correlated with accuracies of their respective conditions for younger and older adults. That is, GSC ROIs were correlated with single and dual accuracies; LSC ROIs were correlated with non-switch and switch accuracies. Age-sensitive ROIs, indexed by younger > older contrast, for Task > Fixation were also determined, and then correlated with single and dual accuracies. | |
| We used a hybrid blocked and event-related design. The task consisted of alternating cycles of task (T) and fixation (F) blocks with the following structure: F, T, F, T, F, T, F, T, F. Each fixation block was of 30 s duration and the four task blocks were of 154 s duration each. Each task block had 30 trials in which a stimulus was presented for 3 s, within which the participant responded, followed by a fixation cross. To optimize stimulus sequence and timing the inter-trial interval (ITI) ranged from 1.5 to 5 s with a mean ITI of 2.13 s. The first two task blocks were single task, the next two were dual task where the task for each trial was randomly selected from Odd/Even or High/Low tasks. Three type of cognitive control costs were evaluated in this study: global switch cost (GSC), local switch cost (LSC), and compatibility switch cost (CSC). | |
| Dallas, TX, USA | |
| Analyzed data is provided in this article. | |
| This data in brief article was submitted as a companion paper to a research article |