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Recognition Memory is Associated with Distinct Patterns of Regional Gray Matter Volumes in Young and Aged Monkeys

Authors :
Sharyn L Rossi
Hong Gu
C'iana P. Cooper
Peter R. Rapp
Yihong Yang
Christa Herold
Andrea T. Shafer
Jennifer E. Young
Elliot A. Stein
Susan M. Resnick
Nicole M. Armstrong
Source :
Cereb Cortex
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Cognitive aging varies tremendously across individuals and is often accompanied by regionally specific reductions in gray matter (GM) volume, even in the absence of disease. Rhesus monkeys provide a primate model unconfounded by advanced neurodegenerative disease, and the current study used a recognition memory test (delayed non-matching to sample; DNMS) in conjunction with structural imaging and voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to characterize age-related differences in GM volume and brain-behavior relationships. Consistent with expectations from a long history of neuropsychological research, DNMS performance in young animals prominently correlated with the volume of multiple structures in the medial temporal lobe memory system. Less anticipated correlations were also observed in the cingulate and cerebellum. In aged monkeys, significant volumetric correlations with DNMS performance were largely restricted to the prefrontal cortex and striatum. Importantly, interaction effects in an omnibus analysis directly confirmed that the associations between volume and task performance in the MTL and prefrontal cortex are age-dependent. These results demonstrate that the regional distribution of GM volumes coupled with DNMS performance changes across the lifespan, consistent with the perspective that the aged primate brain retains a substantial capacity for structural reorganization.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cereb Cortex
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62f0387db45c5d23d3ebd5d07e1e3e8a