학술논문

Does Hemispheric Asymmetry Reduction in Older Adults in Motor Cortex Reflect Compensation?
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Neuroscience. 11/10/2021, Vol. 41 Issue 45, p9361-9373. 13p.
Subject
*OLDER people
*MOTOR cortex
*NEURAL inhibition
*TASK performance
*LIFE spans
Language
ISSN
0270-6474
Abstract
Older adults tend to display greater brain activation in the nondominant hemisphere during even basic sensorimotor responses. It is debated whether this hemispheric asymmetry reduction in older adults (HAROLD) reflects a compensatory mechanism. Across two independent fMRI experiments involving adult life span human samples (N = 586 and N = 81, approximately half female) who performed right-hand finger responses, we distinguished between these hypotheses using behavioral and multivariate Bayes (MVB) decoding approaches. Standard univariate analyses replicated a HAROLD pattern in motor cortex, but in and out of scanner behavioral results both demonstrated evidence against a compensatory relationship in that reaction time measures of task performance in older adults did not relate to ipsilateral motor activity. Likewise, MVB showed that this increased ipsilateral activity in older adults did not carry additional information, and if anything, combining ipsilateral with contralateral activity patterns reduced action decoding in older adults (at least in experiment 1). These results contradict the hypothesis that HAROLD is compensatory and instead suggest that the age-related ipsilateral hyperactivation is nonspecific, consistent with alternative hypotheses about age-related reductions in neural efficiency/differentiation or interhemispheric inhibition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]