Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6007446 Clinical Neurophysiology 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A clinically practical ERP protocol for neurometric profiling.•Detecting age-related changes in brain function in high-functioning older adults.•Healthy brain aging is associated with altered visual and sensory memory.

ObjectiveEvent-related potentials (ERPs) show promise as markers of neurocognitive dysfunction, but conventional recording procedures render measurement of many ERP-based neurometrics clinically impractical. The purpose of this work was (a) to develop a brief neurometric battery capable of eliciting a broad profile of ERPs in a single, clinically practical recording session, and (b) to evaluate the sensitivity of this neurometric profile to age-related changes in brain function.MethodsNested auditory stimuli were interleaved with visual stimuli to create a 20-min battery designed to elicit at least eight ERP components representing multiple sensory, perceptual, and cognitive processes (Frequency & Gap MMN, P50, P3, vMMN, C1, N2pc, and ERN). Data were recorded from 21 younger and 21 high-functioning older adults.ResultsSignificant multivariate differences were observed between ERP profiles of younger and older adults. Metrics derived from ERP profiles could be used to classify individuals into age groups with a jackknifed classification accuracy of 78.6%.ConclusionsResults support the utility of this design for neurometric profiling in clinical settings.SignificanceThis study demonstrates a method for measuring a broad profile of ERP-based neurometrics in a single, brief recording session. These markers may be used individually or in combination to characterize/classify patterns of sensory and/or perceptual brain function in clinical populations.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Neurology
Authors
, , , ,