Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6263084 Brain Research 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Self-referencing engages largely similar neural regions in young and older adults.•When participants make only self judgments, findings diverge from prior work.•Older adults encode self-relevant information relative to others more than young.

Although engagement of medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) underlies self-referencing of information for younger and older adults, the region has not consistently been implicated across age groups for the encoding of self-referenced information. We sought to determine whether making judgments about others as well as the self influenced findings in the previous study. During an fMRI session, younger and older adults encoded adjectives using only a self-reference task. For items later remembered compared to those later forgotten, both age groups robustly recruited medial prefrontal cortex, indicating common neural regions support encoding across younger and older adults when participants make only self-reference judgments. Focal age differences emerged in regions related to emotional processing and cognitive control, though these differences are more limited than in tasks in which judgments also are made about others. We conclude that making judgments about another person differently affects the ways that younger and older adults make judgments about the self, with results of a follow-up behavioral study supporting this interpretation.This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Memory and Aging.

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