Seniors Need
More of Brain Than Young People
Senior
Journal
August 17, 2001

Older adults actually use
different regions of the brain and more of the brain than younger adults
to perform the same memory and information processing tasks, according to
University of Michigan research to be presented Aug. 24 at the annual
meeting of the American Psychological Association in San Francisco.
The
research, conducted by U-M cognitive neuroscientist Patricia Reuter-Lorenz
and colleagues and funded by the National Institute on Aging, provides
intriguing clues about how older adults compensate for some of the
age-related declines in short-term memory and mental speed that plague so
many older Americans.
"Older adults activate
both hemispheres of the brain to remember what younger adults can remember
using just one hemisphere," says Reuter-Lorenz,
who has just received a new grant from the NIA to continue her research.
In the APA presentation, and in a
series of recent publications in the Journal of Cognitive Neurosciences
and the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Reuter-Lorenz and
colleagues report on the findings of a series of studies that use
functional positron emission tomography (PET) images to elucidate how the
aging brain works.
Not only have they found that
as we age, two hemispheres are better than one, they have also discovered
that in older adults, unexpected regions of the brain are activated for
verbal and spatial memory tasks.
When younger adults hold
information in short-term memory, like rehearsing a phone number, they
activate a network of brain regions involved in speech and short-term
verbal storage. Older adults activate these areas also, but show
additional activation of a frontal cortex region that young adults use
only when performing complex short-term memory tasks.
In one study, older and younger
subjects were shown four letters, then asked to determine if a letter
presented a few seconds later matched any of the initial four. As
expected, Reuter-Lorenz found that seniors made more errors and were
slower at the task than young subjects. And PET scans of the subjects'
brains while they were being tested showed that older subjects activated
more areas of the brain in both hemispheres than young subjects, who
showed activity mainly in the left hemisphere.
In another study of spatial
memory, subjects were shown a group of marked locations on a screen, then
presented a few seconds later with a single mark and asked to determine
whether its position matched any in the earlier group. Reuter-Lorenz again
found different activation patterns for younger and older subjects.
Younger subjects showed greater right hemisphere activation, while older
subjects activated both left and right hemispheres.
"Recruiting additional
regions of the brain seems to assist older adults in basic memory storage
tasks," Reuter-Lorenz says. "But when it comes to more complex
processing tasks, this strategy isn't as successful."
When seniors and young subjects
were asked to determine the accuracy of a math calculation ((10x9) + 8 =
98), their performance was equivalent. But when subjects were presented
with a word in addition to the math problem, and asked to remember it, the
performance of seniors dropped dramatically.
Because regions at the front of
the brain, in the area known as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC),
were "recruited" by the seniors for the simple short-term memory
task, Reuter-Lorenz believes that these regions may have been preoccupied
and less available for the more complex tasks.
Overall, though, Reuter-Lorenz
believes that older adults benefit from bi-hemispheric processing. Using
two hemispheres instead of one, and more of the brain overall, may allow
seniors to compensate for some of the mental declines that come with age,
she suggests. Moreover, by identifying precisely which areas of the brain
seniors are using to remember and process information, she hopes that
scientists and physicians will be able to develop more effective
interventions to help seniors maintain and improve brain function well
into old age.