Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6203676 | Vision Research | 2012 | 8 Pages |
An electrophysiological study on the effect of aging on the visual pathway and various levels of visual information processing (primary cortex, associate visual motion processing cortex and cognitive cortical areas) was performed. We examined visual evoked potentials (VEPs) to pattern-reversal, motion-onset (translation and radial motion) and visual stimuli with a cognitive task (cognitive VEPs - P300 wave) at luminance of 17Â cd/m2. The most significant age-related change in a group of 150 healthy volunteers (15-85Â years of age) was the increase in the P300 wave latency (2Â ms per 1Â year of age). Delays of the motion-onset VEPs (0.47Â ms/year in translation and 0.46Â ms/year in radial motion) and the pattern-reversal VEPs (0.26Â ms/year) and the reductions of their amplitudes with increasing subject age (primarily in P300) were also found to be significant. The amplitude of the motion-onset VEPs to radial motion remained the most constant parameter with increasing age. Age-related changes were stronger in males.Our results indicate that cognitive VEPs, despite larger variability of their parameters, could be a useful criterion for an objective evaluation of the aging processes within the CNS. Possible differences in aging between the motion-processing system and the form-processing system within the visual pathway might be indicated by the more pronounced delay in the motion-onset VEPs and by their preserved size for radial motion (a biologically significant variant of motion) compared to the changes in pattern-reversal VEPs.
⺠Aging effect on visual pathway and visual cortex up to cognitive areas was evaluated. ⺠In 150 healthy volunteers (15-85 years) visual evoked potentials were examined. ⺠Pattern-reversal, motion-onset and cognitive stimuli were used. ⺠The most age related change was prolongation of the P300 wave in cognitive potentials. ⺠The motion-processing system displays a quicker aging compared to the form-processing one.