Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4313184 Behavioural Brain Research 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Effects of practice on a conflict task in elderly individuals are examined with a focus on its impact on executive function in working memory. During a short-term practice period, healthy elderly participants practiced switching attention using a Stroop task that involved a conflict between a task relevant stimulus and an irrelevant stimulus. To explore neural substrates underlying practice effects, two working memory tasks were used: a focus reading span test (F-RST) and a non-focus reading span test (NF-RST); the NF-RST test demanded greater switching attention due to a conflict between the relevant task stimulus and an irrelevant task stimulus, thus requiring an attention switch from the latter to the former. Following the Stroop task practice, fMRI data showed that participants who had engaged in practice had significant increases in activation in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), the left inferior parietal lobule (IPL), the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and the precuneus regions during the NF-RST. By contrast, a control group, which did not practice, showed no significant increases in these regions. Results suggest that practice on conflict tasks in elderly individuals activated regions related to conflict perceiving and attention switching regions as well as attention-maintenance regions thereby improving performance on tasks requiring a high degree of attention control of working memory.

► Practicing on conflict tasks improves attention switching and inhibitory control in the elderly. ► After short term practicing, the fMRI data showed significant increases in the ACC. ► Activation increases were also found in the left DLPFC and IPL and precuneus regions. ► Activation increases were found only in the difficult task which requires conflict resolution. ► Age-related impairment in working memory performance is caused by ineffective attention control.

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