22 results
6 Trauma Exposure as a Predictor for Score Profiles on Structured and Unstructured Tasks of Verbal Memory in a Community Sample
- Halima Hussaini, Hannah VanLandingham, Madeline Sadoff, Kush Patil, Jay Rosen, Allison Kaup, Lori Haase Alasantro
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 525-526
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Objective:
Evidence suggests that the most consistent cognitive impairment found in individuals experiencing posttraumatic stress disorder symptomology is verbal memory impairment (Johnsen & Asbjornsen, 2008). More specifically, research has shown that patients with PTSD perform poorer on verbal memory tasks relating to logical (story) memory than on word memory tasks, such as CVLT-III (Barrera-Valencia et al., 2017). While recent literature accounts for memory impairments related to PTSD, less is known about this relationship for individuals with mere trauma exposure compared to individuals without trauma exposure. The present research aims to determine if there is a significant impact on WMS-LM when compared to CVLT-III for individuals in a community sample that have been exposed to a traumatic event in their lifetime.
Participants and Methods:One hundred nineteen patients presented to a community-based practice for neuropsychological evaluation. Patients were screened for trauma exposure during a clinical interview. Immediate and long delay trials of Wechsler Memory Scale IV Logical Memory (WMS-LM) were used to examine structured learning and memory and the California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT-II) immediate and long delay recalls were used to examine unstructured learning and memory. Out of the 119 patients, 36 patients reported trauma exposure. Twenty-five were diagnosed as “normal,” 62 were diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment, and 32 were diagnosed with dementia. A one-way MANOVA was conducted to examine the relationship across the multiple dependent variables.
Results:There was a statistically significant difference in immediate recall in memory based on exposure to trauma, F (2, 116) = 3.28, p < .05; Wilk’s A = 0.947, partial n2 = .53, such that individuals with trauma exposure performed better. For long delay recall performance, there was a similar trend though it did not reach statistical significance F (2, 114) = 3.03, p = .052; Wilk’s A = 0.949, partial n2 = .51.
Conclusions:Data showed that patients who reported trauma exposure scored significantly higher on immediate recall performance on CVLT and WMS-LM than those who did not report trauma exposure. Although research suggests that patients who were exposed to trauma often experience cognitive deficits on verbal memory tasks, evidence also shows that trauma exposure can lead to higher immediate recall performance in memory related to attentional allocation modeling (Hayes et al., 2012).
33 Title: Examining memory performances in a sample of cognitively healthy illiterate older adult population in India
- Sonakshi Arora
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 445-446
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Despite the rise in literacy, 773 million of the global population is estimated to be illiterate. The rate of illiteracy is even higher among women and older adults (OA). Literacy has been well documented to impact cognitive skills, and most neuropsychological tests developed are for individuals with higher education. Moreover, there is sparse research on cognitive process and performance of illiterate individuals across cognitive domains.
Per a 2011 census, the illiteracy rate in the Indian older adult population was as high as 56%, and within this group, women and older adults in rural regions were especially vulnerable. Thus, it is important to understand cognitive performance of illiterate Indian older adult population, especially when they are being assessed for neurodegenerative disorders.
Participants and Methods:This study used subset of data from Harmonized Longitudinal Aging Study of India, Diagnostic Assessment of Dementia (LASI DAD), which was developed by the Gateway to Global Aging Data. A sample of cognitive healthy OA (n = 715) was selected based on Hindi Mental Status Exam score of >19 and a Clinical Dementia Rating Scale of 0 (literate = 419, illiterate = 296). Given the heterogeneity of the population, adapted cognitive instruments were used. This study compared memory performances, using word list and constructional praxis with delayed recall tasks, of OA based on their literacy status (illiterate vs. literate).
Results:Literate cognitive healthy OA (M = 15.27, SD = 3.9) learned more words over three trials than illiterate OA (M = 12.17, SD = 3.7) on a world list task, a statistically significant difference (M = 3.1, 95% CI [2.5, 3.6], t (713) = 10.62, p<0.05. Literate OA (M = 8.7, SD = 2.2) had higher scores on task of copy of simple geometrical figures than illiterate OA (M = 5.3, SD = 2.8), a statistically significant difference (M = 3.3, 95% CI [2.9, 3.7], t (713) = 7.1, p<0.05. Literate OA (M = 4.5, SD = 1.8) also recalled more words than illiterate OA (M = 3.6, SD = 2.1) after a delay. Recall of geometric figures after a delay was higher for literate OA (M = 5, SD = 2.9) as well compared to illiterate OA (M = 2.4, SD = 2.5).
Conclusions:Conclusion: In a sample of cognitively healthy Indian older adults, literate OA consistently performed better than illiterate OA on both verbal and nonverbal memory measures. This is consistent with past literature which shows that illiterate individuals take longer to learn verbal information and have lower recall. Additionally, use of geometric figure may be complicated for these individuals. These are important considerations when assessing an OA for memory problems with low or no education. Next steps would be to look at differences across other cognitive domains and also examining if cognitive differences exist in illiterate OA based on gender.
33 The Impact of Context on Memory for Short Stories Among Older and Younger Adults
- Justin M. Palmer, Lesley A. Guareña, Lee Ryan
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 343-344
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On traditional pattern separation tasks, older adults perform worse than younger adults when identifying similar objects but perform equally well when recognizing repeated objects. When objects are superimposed on semantically related scenes, older adults are influenced by the context to a greater degree than younger adults, leading to errors when identifying similar objects. However, in everyday life, people rarely need to differentiate between two perceptually similar objects. Therefore, we developed a task using short stories to represent similar events people may experience in daily life. Our goal was to investigate the influence of context, detail-type, and age on memory performance.
Participants and Methods:Twenty-one older and 18 younger adults listened to 20 short stories taking place in either a coffee shop or library, each paired with a unique picture (i.e., context). Participants were asked to imagine the story taking place within the picture. Approximately 20 minutes later, participants answered a yes/no question about a detail from a story superimposed on different contexts. The different context conditions were (1) the same picture from the original story, (2) a similar picture (i.e., a different library or coffee shop picture), (3) a dissimilar picture (i.e., a library picture instead of a coffee shop picture), or (4) a control using a Fourier-transform (FT) image without any spatial-context information. Questions either asked about an identical or similar detail from the story.
Results:Correct answers were analyzed using a 4x2x2 repeated measures ANOVA including context (same, similar, dissimilar, and FT), detail type (identical and similar), and age (younger and older adults). Overall, younger adults were more accurate than older adults, F(1,37)=23.4, p<0.001. However, surprisingly, the context and detail-type made no difference in accuracy, (F’s<1.1) A similar model was used to analyze reaction times. Younger adults were faster than older adults, F(1,37)=23.4, p<0.001. Participants of both ages were faster at correctly responding to the identical detail than the similar detail, F(1,114)=62.87, p<0.001. Context also impacted reaction time, F(3,114)=7.97, p<0.001. All participants were faster while viewing same and similar contexts compared to both the dissimilar and FT contexts (t(39)’s>2.20, p’s<0.05).
Conclusions:We did not find the kinds of age-related effects normally observed on traditional pattern separation tasks. Although younger adults performed better overall, older adults were not any worse when responding to a similar detail compared to an identical detail, which is inconsistent with performance on pattern separation tasks where older adults perform worse when identifying similar objects compared to younger adults. Additionally, older and younger adults were influenced by context in the same way. Previous studies from our laboratory demonstrated that older adults are biased toward the context when recognizing similar objects, but the context in this paradigm did not differentially influence accuracy for either older or younger adults. Potentially, this task relies on more semantic similarity rather than the perceptual similarity of objects. Semantic similarity from the short stories may incorporate more information to better orthogonalize similar memories, rendering retrieval less susceptible to interference.
1 Social Support is Associated with Better Memory Performance among Hispanic/Latino, but not Non-Hispanic White Older Adults
- Abbey M Hamlin, Jordana Breton, Nazareth Ortega, Joaquin Urquiza-Perez, Lauren Eisenstat, Megan Perry, Thaha Hossain, Sanya Kotian, Alexandra L Clark
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 317-318
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Hispanic/Latino (H/L) older adults are at greater risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias compared to non-Hispanic whites (NHW), and there is an urgent need to identify important factors that may help prevent and/or reduce age-related cognitive health disparities. Positive psychosocial factors, such as social support, may protect against cognitive impairment and decline. However, recent research has highlighted that the effect of social support on cognitive outcomes may differ across racial/ethnic groups. Given the emphasis placed on family relationships and support in H/L culture, the current study sought to clarify whether H/L ethnicity moderated the association between social support and cognitive functioning in a well-characterized sample of community-dwelling older adults residing in Texas.
Participants and Methods:Participants included 766 NHW and 817 H/L (predominantly Mexican American) older adults (Mage = 66.25 ±8.64) without dementia enrolled in the Health and Aging Brain Study-Health Disparities. Participants completed study questionnaires and a comprehensive neuropsychological battery. Perceived social support was measured using the total sum score from the 12-item abbreviated version of the Interpersonal Support Evaluation List. Episodic memory performance was operationalized as the z-score composite of the immediate and delayed recall totals from the Spanish English Verbal Learning Test and the Weschler Memory Scale (WMS)-III Logical Memory 1 and 2. Executive functioning was operationalized as the z-score composite of scores from the WMS-III Digit Span, Verbal Fluency (FAS), and Trails B. Analyses of covariance were used to explore racial/ethnic group differences in self-reported levels of social support. Multiple linear regression models examined (1) ethnicity x social support interactions on cognition, and (2) ethnicity-stratified social support and cognition associations. Covariates included age, education, sex, yearly income, and depressive symptoms.
Results:H/L older adults reported less perceived social support compared to NHWs (F = 41.16, p < .001). There were no significant ethnicity x social support interactions on episodic memory (ß = 0.04, p = .53) or executive functioning (ß = 0.004, p = .95). However, stratified models revealed that more social support was associated with better memory performance in H/Ls (ß = 0.08, p = .01), but not in NHWs (ß = 0.0004, p = .99). No significant associations between social support and executive functioning were observed amongst H/Ls (ß = -0.01, p = .60) or NHWs (ß = 0.04, p = .29).
Conclusions:Although H/Ls reported lower levels of social support relative to NHWs, we observed that social support was linked to better memory performance within the H/L group only. Results suggest that culturally tailored interventions which encourage strong interpersonal relationships and caring for family could enhance social support in H/Ls and thus help to prevent memory decline. Future work should focus on the development of assessment measures that better characterize unique cultural elements of social support within H/Ls, such as multigenerational households, and explore the direct effects of social support on brain metrics.
2 Examining Gender Differences in the Serial Position Effect and its Relationship to Memory Outcomes
- Cardinal Do, Julie Suhr
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 861-862
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Objective:
There are gender-related disparities in age of diagnosis of Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) or dementia, with women often receiving delayed diagnoses compared to men. These delays may be related to the general female advantage in episodic verbal memory across aging. Thus, it is important to identify methods of examining memory performance that can help to reduce disparities in diagnosis. The serial position effect, a pattern where individuals tend to remember more words at the beginning (primacy) and end (recency) of a list, is predictive of dementia and may provide an avenue for this endeavor. Whereas healthy adults tend to exhibit a prototypical U-shaped serial position profile, those with MCI or dementia tend to show reduced primacy relative to recency (i.e., a J-shaped profile). To date, few studies have examined gender differences in the serial position effect. There is some evidence to suggest that older, cognitively healthy women perform better than men on middle and recency, but more research is needed to clarify the relationship between gender and the serial position effect, which was the focus of this study.
Participants and Methods:We utilized data across three archival datasets, which included a total of 338 participants (67.5% female; Mage=66.9, SDage=9.4) divided into three age groups (50-64, 65-75, 76+). Scores on the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS) immediate and delayed memory indices (IMI and DMI, respectively) were used to assess verbal episodic memory abilities. Performances across learning trials of the List Learning task were utilized to examine the serial position effect. ANCOVA analyses were conducted and utilized regional scoring of list learning performance, which examined the percentage of correctly recalled words in each portion of the list (primacy, middle, and recency). We also calculated the relative strength of primacy to list learning to examine the relationship between J-curve performance and gender. Years of education was included as a covariate in all analyses.
Results:Consistent with prior literature, men performed worse performance on both IMI F(1, 331)=17.20, p<.001, and DMI, F(1, 331)=6.87, p=.009, across aging. Repeated measured GLM showed that the serial position effect was seen across the full sample, F(1.93, 639.874)=5.66, p=.004, and interacted with gender, F(1.933, 639.874)=5.70, p=.004, and education, F(1.933, 639.874)=6.13, p = .003. Although men and women did not differ in primacy, p = .67, women performed better in middle, p < .001, and recency, p = .03, performance. Higher education was associated with better primacy, but not middle or recency, performance. Additionally, 23.1% of the sample exhibited a J-curve pattern, and there was a main effect of J-curve pattern for both IMI, F(1, 334)=12.33, p<.001, and DMI, F(1, 334)=15.62, p<.001, with those showing a J=curve having worse memory performance.
Conclusions:Our finding of no gender difference in primacy suggests that focusing on primacy performance in verbal list learning may help to address gender-related disparities in MCI or dementia diagnosis. Additionally, given evidence of education being associated with primacy, but not middle or recency, performance, future research should investigate the development of education-based normative data for primacy performance.
4 Comparing Learning Process Variables to Memory Performance and Salivary Cortisol: Is Gender a Moderator of Relationships?
- Kendra Pizzonia, Kathi Heffner, Taylor Lambertus, Julie Suhr
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 862-863
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Objective:
Learning process variables such as the serial position effect and learning ratio (LR) are predictive of cognitive decline and dementia. Gender differences on memory measures are well documented, but there is inconsistent evidence for gender effects on learning process variables. In the present study, we examined the relationship of serial position and LR to memory performance and to cortisol levels, considering gender as a potential moderator.
Participants and Methods:Data were taken from a deidentified dataset of a study on stress and aging in which 123 healthy community-dwelling adults over age 50 completed various assessments. Our analyses included 100 participants (56% female, 93% white, Mage 60.65, Meducation 15.22 years) who completed all measures of interest. LR, primacy effect, and recency effect were calculated from the learning trials of the Auditory Verbal Learning Test (AVLT). Additional memory measures included recall measures from the AVLT and from the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS). AUC cortisol was calculated from salivary cortisol samples taken across 6 time points in the study.
Results:Women performed better than men on LR, primacy, and traditional memory measures (ps=<.001 to .018) but not on recency (p=.40). LR was moderately correlated with primacy (r=.481, p<.001) and weakly correlated with recency (r=.271, p=.008), after controlling for age, gender, and education. After controlling for age, gender, and education, better LR was related to better memory performance across all measures (rs=.276-.693, ps= <.001-.007) and better recency was related to better performance on all memory measures (rs=.212-.396, ps=<.001-.038). Better primacy was related to better AVLT immediate and delayed recall and RBANS Immediate Memory Index (rs=.326-.532, p<.001) but not RBANS delayed (r=.115, p=.263).
Hierarchical linear regressions were conducted to examine gender as a moderator of relationships between learning process variables and memory performance, after accounting for age, gender, and education. There were no gender by LR (ps=.349-.830) or gender by primacy interactions (ps=.124-.671). There was an interaction between gender and recency on AVLT memory measures (ps=.006-.022), but not on RBANS measures (ps=.076-.745). For men, higher recency was related to higher AVLT immediate and delayed recall (rs=.501-.541, ps<.001), but not for women (rs=.-.029-.020, ps=.839-.888), after controlling for age and education. The relationship of AUC salivary cortisol to learning process measures was also moderated by gender (LR/gender interaction p=.055; primacy/gender interaction p=.047; but not recency/gender p=.79). Interestingly, for women, higher cortisol was related to higher LR (r=.16) and higher primacy (r=.36), while for men, it was related to lower LR (r=-.22) and not to primacy (r=-.05). Cortisol was not related to recency (rs=-.04 to -.07).
Conclusions:Women performed better on LR and primacy, as well as on other traditional memory variables, but gender did not appear to differentially impact the relationship of LR or primacy to memory outcomes. Findings suggest some differential relationships of recency to memory outcomes by gender. Results also suggested potential gender differences in the relationship of cortisol to learning process variables, but further study is necessary, especially with samples of individuals with memory impairment.
78 The Effects of Hypertension and Obstructive Sleep Apnea on Auditory Learning and Memory in Veterans with PTSD Symptomology
- Valerie Z. Alipio Jocson, Julie Gretler, Marcel Chen, Jerome A. Yesavage, Lisa M. Kinoshita
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 586-587
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Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has been associated with cognitive deficits as evidenced by neuropsychological testing in the domains of attention/working memory, verbal memory, processing speed, and executive function. OSA is often comorbid with hypertension and has been considered a risk factor for hypertension (Kareem et al., 2018; Tietjens et al., 2019). Both hypertension and OSA have been shown to be independent predictors of memory (Kinoshita et al., 2012). OSA and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are also frequently co-occurring, especially among veterans. In a group of veterans with a history of PTSD, we seek to explore the effects of sleep apnea and hypertension on cognitive functioning, particularly auditory learning/memory.
Participants and Methods:One hundred and three male and female participants with comorbid OSA and PTSD symptomology were screened as part of a larger VA Palo Alto Health Care System study. Participants (age: x=56.3, a=13.8, 24-81 years; education: x=14.6, a=2.3, 8-20 years; 9.6% female, 89.6% male) completed a neuropsychological battery, including the CVLT-II and WMS-IV Logical Memory. Presence or absence of hypertension was dichotomously coded and AHI severity was categorically coded. An auditory learning/memory composite variable was created using the z-score transformation method (Dodge et al., 2020). Variables and covariates were entered into a hierarchical regression.
Results:The initial regression model revealed hypertension and OSA severity to be independent predictors of performance on auditory learning/memory (hypertension: ß= -0.71, p<0.01; OSA: ß= -0.42, p<0.01), where presence of hypertension or increased severity of OSA resulted in worse performance on the auditory learning/memory composite.
Conclusions:Results suggest that hypertension and OSA may independently and negatively affect performance on measures of auditory learning/memory in veterans with PTSD symptomology and OSA. Such findings underscore the importance of assessing and treating both hypertension and OSA among veterans with PTSD to improve not only physical health, but also cognitive health. Further research demonstrating similar findings is recommended along with studies investigating whether or not the treatment of hypertension and OSA can improve auditory learning/memory.
60 Neural Correlates of the Self-Reference Effect: Neuronal Mechanisms Supporting Self-Referential Encoding
- Andreina Hampton, Pawel Tacikowski, Itzhak Fried
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 468-469
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Self-concept is a mental representation of the self—an internal sense of personal identity. This complex representation is unique to the human mind. Behavioral studies on self-concept have demonstrated that self-relevant information is remembered better than other types of information, a phenomenon commonly known as the “self-reference effect” (SRE). However, the underlying neural mechanisms of SRE remain largely unknown.
Participants and Methods:Here, we recorded neural activity from ∼600 neurons from 15 neurosurgical epilepsy patients, who were implanted with depth electrodes for seizure monitoring. The SRE paradigm consisted of an incidental learning (encoding) task and subsequent memory recognition test. During the incidental learning task, participants were asked to rate various personality traits in three distinct encoding conditions: the self, a friend, and a celebrity. In the recognition part of the task, participants were asked to distinguish between traits that were presented during the encoding phase (old) and traits that were not presented (new).
Results:Our behavioral findings showed the highest memory accuracy on the recognition test for traits that were associated with the “self” condition, which is consistent with previous studies on SRE. Additionally, we found that traits associated with the “friend” category were more accurately recognized than those associated with a celebrity, indicating that personally familiar information—even if not self-related— improves memory recognition. Through single-unit analyses from target brain regions, including the medial temporal lobe (MTL) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), we identified unique patterns of neural activity during the memory encoding phase, specifically increased responses during self-referential encoding in a subset of the neuronal population.
Conclusions:Future analyses will explore the relationship between increased MTL activity during self-referential encoding and improved memory recognition of traits rated in relation to the self, and network interactions between MTL and mPFC in self-oriented memory processes.
42 Age-Related Alterations in Representational Forms of Imagination: A Novel Scoring Protocol Applied to Autobiographical Memory
- Mariam Hovhannisyan, Nadine Chau, Austin Deffner, Jessica R Andrews-Hanna, Matthew D Grilli
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 351-352
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Human imagination is a complex system that allows us to form images or concepts in the mind that are not present to the senses. Research on imagination has been heavily influenced by the idea that humans store two distinct types of long-term memory: episodic and semantic memory. This theoretical distinction is particularly important in the context of aging, where older adults show reduced episodic memory compared to semantic memory (Levine et al., 2002). However, recent work has shown that these two memories are not as distinct as once thought (Renoult et al., 2019; Irish & Vatansever, 2020), suggesting a need to either refine the relationship between these concepts, or the concepts themselves.
Here, we apply a broader framework for imagination to the autobiographical memories of older adults. Introduced by Andrews-Hanna & Grilli (2021), memory and future thoughts can be understood as the outcome of the collaboration between two representational forms of imagination: the mind’s mind and the mind’s eye. The mind’s mind is described as a high-level, abstract form of imagination accompanied by a verbal representational form, and the mind’s eye is described as a contextually-specific, image-based form of imagination. In the present study, we examine whether this broader framework for understanding imaginative thought can a) explain some of the established age-related changes in episodic and semantic memory, and b) extend beyond existing research to offer new ways to conceptualize autobiographical memory in aging.
Participants and Methods:In this study, we introduce a novel scoring protocol distinguishing mind’s eye from mind’s mind forms of imagination and apply this protocol to the autobiographical memories of eighty-two cognitively normal older adults. Participants were instructed to retrieve unique autobiographical events, and to focus on describing event-specific details. All data were scored both with our new scoring protocol as well as the Autobiographical Interview scoring protocol from Levine et al. (2002).
Results:Our novel scoring protocol demonstrated high inter-rater reliability across two raters for both mind’s mind (0.95) and mind’s eye (0.96) details. First, we show that the proportion of mind’s mind and mind’s eye details on average are significantly different, with an increased proportion of mind’s eye details. Second, we find that both mind’s eye detail production and mind’s mind detail production is significantly reduced with age, whereas only internal details decline across age when scored with the Autobiographical Interview scoring procedure.
Conclusions:The new scoring protocol suggests that both mind’s mind and mind’s eye details undergo change with age, a finding that shares similarities and differences with results from the Autobiographical Interview scoring technique. Taken together, our results hint at a more elaborate set of detail types forming autobiographical memories that change with age, with implications for understanding episodic and semantic memory.
15 Socioeconomic Status in Association to Memory-Related Brain Activation in Middle-Aged Adults
- Hanna Nkulu, Reshma Babukutty, Caleb Haynes, Yunglin Gazes
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 806-807
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Socioeconomic status (SES) has been recognized as an important factor in psychological research within the last few decades. Past literature recognizes that having lower SES can have a negative impact on many aspects of one’s health, especially in diseases related to brain aging. A recent avenue for research regarding SES and the brain-behavior relationship suggests that socioeconomic status can act as a moderator for brain activation during task performance. The hypothesis for this project was that there will be a negative correlational relationship between brain activity and SES when controlling for participants’ age, sex, and performance on the episodic memory tasks, but a positive correlation between task performance and SES was expected.
Participants and Methods:With 100 middle-aged healthy adults from the Reference Ability Neural Network (RANN) study (53 male and 47 female, age M=48.0 +/- 7.55 years), three episodic memory fMRI tasks were performed and studied in relation to SES and age. The tasks were Logical Memory, Word Order, and Pair Associates tasks that involved episodic memory for story details, order of words presented, and pairing of words, respectively. We quantified memory performance with average accuracy from performance of the three tasks. We used the FSL software to preprocess and perform voxel-wise group analysis. All brain activation analyses were corrected for multiple comparison using cluster thresholds in FSL.
Results:Correlation between SES and memory performance was found to be marginally significant (R=.188, p=.061). All tasks had areas of positively correlated activation for age. The Logical Memory task had multiple areas of brain activation that were positively correlated with age, particularly at the lateral occipital cortex, lingual gyrus, and the occipital fusiform gyrus, all areas that underlie visual processing. There were no areas of correlated brain activation for SES, sex, and task performance for the Pair Associates and Logical Memory tasks. Brain activation for the Word order task in the left precuneous cortex and the right middle frontal gyrus, left lateral occipital cortex, left occipital fusiform gyrus, and parts of the lingual gyrus was positively correlated with memory performance when controlled for age, sex, and SES.
Conclusions:The hypothesis was not entirely supported by the results of this study, but the marginal effect between SES and memory performance can suggest that SES may affect memory performance within middle-aged adults. While we did not find a brain association with SES in this age group, we observed regions that underlie task performance. Further research can be done on possible moderating effects of Socioeconomic Status on memory and executive function with structural neuroimaging to further investigate the effects of SES on cognition.
6 The Moderating Role of Physical Activity on Hippocampal Iron Deposition and Memory Outcomes in Typically Aging Older Adults
- Shannon Y Lee, Emily W Paolillo, Rowan Saloner, Torie Tsuei, Anna VandeBunte, Joel H Kramer, Kaitlin B Casaletto
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 794-795
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Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping (QSM) is an MRI-based technique that sensitively measures in-vivo iron deposition via relaxation and magnetic susceptibility of brain tissue. Iron is essential for brain homeostasis, including oxidative metabolism, formation and maintenance of neural networks, and myelin synthesis. While increased levels of iron deposition occur during normal aging, high levels may have detrimental effects. Previous work has linked excessive brain iron accumulation to oxidative stress, beta-amyloid and tau toxicity, neurodegeneration, and cognitive dysfunction, particularly memory loss. Physical activity, on the other hand, correlates with higher synaptic integrity and memory performance, even in the presence of neuropathology. To date, it is unknown how physical activity may affect iron deposition-related cognition changes. We examined the moderating role of physical activity on the relationship between QSM hippocampal iron deposition and verbal memory in typically aging adults.
Participants and Methods:62 cognitively unimpaired older adults from the UCSF Memory and Aging Center (age mean(SD) = 78.34(7.28) years; 56% women; education mean(SD) = 17.94(1.72) years; 85% non-Hispanic White) completed neuropsychological testing and brain MRI during annual research visits, followed by Fitbit™ physical activity monitoring for 30 days. Average total daily steps were aggregated. Participants completed 3T Prisma neuroimaging with QSM, and regional iron deposition levels were quantified. All subjects also underwent diffusion tensor imaging (fractional anisotropy). Verbal memory was assessed via long delay free recall scores from the California Verbal Learning Test II (CVLT-II). Linear regression examined verbal memory as a function of hippocampal QSM (bilateral), physical activity, and their interaction. Models covaried for age, sex, and education. Additional models separately examined left and right hippocampal QSM, as well as subcortical QSM to determine lateralization and specificity of verbal memory effects to hippocampal iron deposition, respectively.
Results:Univariably, higher bilateral hippocampal QSM correlated with worse verbal memory (r= 0.35; p= 0.015). Adjusting for demographics, physical activity moderated the relationship between bilateral hippocampal QSM and verbal memory (ß= 0.41, p= 0.011), such that at higher levels of physical activity, the negative relationship between hippocampal QSM and verbal memory was significantly attenuated. Results persisted when adjusting for DTI integrity of the uncinate fasciculus and fornix white matter tracts. Lateralization models were both significant, suggesting that results were not dominantly driven by either left (ß= 0.34, p= 0.048), or right (ß=0.31, p= 0.035) hippocampal QSM. In contrast, subcortical QSM did not correlate with memory performance (r= 0.13, p > 0.05) or interact with physical activity on verbal memory outcomes (p > 0.05).
Conclusions:Physical activity significantly moderated the negative relationship between hippocampal QSM and verbal memory performance. Higher exercise engagement may buffer the adverse effect of hippocampal iron deposition on memory, potentially through its role in maintenance of myelin and synaptic integrity and/or protecting against other neurotoxic events (e.g., oxidative stress, neuronal cell death). Our results support that physical activity continues to be a modifiable risk factor that may offer a protective role in neurobiological pathways of memory and cognitive decline.
28 Social Support, APOE Genotype, and Memory Associations in a Community-Based Sample of Older Adults in Texas
- Nazareth Ortega, Abbey M Hamlin, Jordana Breton, Lauren Eisenstat, Joaquin Urquiza-Perez, Alexandra L. Clark
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 441-442
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Objective:
The apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene has been identified as a major risk factor for the development of Alzheimer’s disease in late life. Research has shown that APOE e4 allele carriers demonstrate poorer memory performance and accelerated cognitive decline relative to non-carriers, and there is a need to identify potential factors of resiliency against the negative effects of e4 on cognition. Social support may represent one potential mechanism given that higher levels of social support have been linked to better cognitive and functional outcomes in older adults. Thus, the current study sought to examine whether social support moderates the relationship between APOE e4 status and subjective and objective memory performance in a large community-based sample of Hispanic/Latino (H/L) and Non-Hispanic White (NHW) older adults residing in Texas.
Participants and Methods:Participants included 1,564 (H/L = 808, NHW = 756) older adults (mean age = 66.36±8.68) without dementia that had enrolled in the Health and Aging Brain Study-Health Disparities. Participants completed study questionnaires and a comprehensive neuropsychological battery. Apolipoprotein e4 status (e4 carriers vs. non-carriers) was determined by possession of at least one e4 allele. Perceived social support was measured using the total score from the abbreviated 12-item version of the Interpersonal Support Evaluation List. Objective memory performance was assessed using a z-score composite of Story A and B from the Weschler Memory Scale (WMS)-III and immediate and delayed recall trials from the Spanish-English Verbal Learning Test. Subjective memory was assessed using the total score from the Subject Memory Complaints Questionnaire. Race stratified multiple linear regression models, controlling for age, sex, and years of education, examined APOE e4 positivity x social support interactions on subjective and objective memory performance.
Results:There was a significant APOE e4 genotype x social support interaction on objective memory performance (ß = -1.10, p = 0.003) in H/Ls such that higher levels of social support were associated with better memory performance in non-e4 carriers (ß = 0.14, p < .001), but not in e4 carriers (ß = -0.13, p = 0.9). In contrast, no significant APOE e4 status x social support interaction was observed on subjective memory (ß = -0.39, p = 0.35) in H/Ls. Finally, results revealed no significant APOE e4 genotype x social support interactions on subjective memory (ß = 0.14 p = 0.77) or objective memory (ß = 0.67, p = 0.11) performance in NHWs. Conclusions: Findings revealed that social support did not mitigate against the negative effects of e4 on subjective and objective memory performance in H/Ls or NHWs. However, results demonstrate that higher levels of social support are associated with better objective, but not subjective memory performance in H/Ls without the e4 genotype. These findings suggest that social support may protect against cognitive decline and enhance cognitive reserve in non-e4 carriers. Future studies should explore other potential factors of resiliency (e.g., diet, exercise) and examine the association between genetic risk and social support on neural markers (e.g., cortical thinning, hippocampal atrophy).
2 The Role of Causality in Understanding How Prior Event Knowledge Impacts New Learning
- Alexa S. Gonzalez, Anna B. Drummey, Tyler J. Hubeny, Alexander Held, Irene P. Kan
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 522-523
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Objective:
The influence of prior knowledge on new learning is well established. However, there has been less research dedicated to teasing apart the key components of prior knowledge’s structure that contribute to memory enhancement. In the current study, we focused on event structures, which include various relations, such as associative, causal, and temporal. Given that events possess attributes relevant to numerous cognitive memory processes, we were most interested in exploring how event structures that possess causal relations enhance new memory formation. Specifically, we examined whether events that exhibit causal associative relations provide an additional boost to new learning compared to event structures with non-causal associative relations.
Participants and Methods:Forty-six undergraduate students took part in the study. Participants’ learning of the content of image pairs that exhibit everyday, real-world events were measured using a cued recall paradigm. The stimuli consisted of 60 image pairs that illustrated two events that were related causally and associatively (i.e., causal pairs); related only associatively (i.e., non-causal pairs); or not related at all (i.e., unrelated pairs). During an encoding phase, image pairs were presented one at a time, and after the presentation of each image pair, participants answered an encoding question that focused on the relationship between the two images. After the encoding phase and a short filler task, participants were shown a cue image (always the first picture from the pair) and were asked to provide a brief written description of the content of the second presented image from each pair. Also, as a manipulation check, we asked subjects to rate each image pair on causal direction and association strength after completion of the cued recall memory task.
Results:We found that, relative to unrelated pairs, events that possess associative relations (i.e., both causal and non-causal items) benefit learning of new information. In addition, causal relations provided an additional boost to new learning. Specifically, cued recall performance is best for causal pairs, followed by non-causal pairs and unrelated pairs. Moreover, causal direction ratings significantly predict overall itemlevel accuracy above and beyond general associative relations that exist in events. We also examined recall accuracy for specific content information within each event (i.e., agent, action, object) and found that causal relations uniquely contribute to recall performance of objects and actions.
Conclusions:Overall, the present study’s findings suggest that prior event knowledge structures possessing causal and non-causal associative relations support new learning, especially compared to image pairs with no relations. Of interest, causality provides an additional boost to new learning above and beyond general associative relations. By focusing on the role of causality in event structures, our findings informed our understanding of how prior knowledge supports new learning. Considering that the effect of prior knowledge on new episodic learning is especially evident in older adults, since they more readily rely on their schematic knowledge, a future direction would entail investigating how causal links influence new memory formation in older adults.
1 Examining Gender Invariance in Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status Learning Ratio
- Claire Alexander, Cardinal Do, Julie Suhr
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 860-861
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Objective:
Process-based measures of verbal learning, such as the recently described learning ratio (LR; Hammers et al., 2022) may add valuable data to neuropsychological assessment. Women tend to have higher episodic verbal memory ability compared to men at all ages, including older adulthood (Golchert et al., 2019; Maitland et al., 2004). However, it is unclear whether gender is related to the process of learning, as quantified through measures of learning slope and ratio. To date only one study has examined this, with Hammers et al. (2021) finding no gender differences on LR in the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS); therefore, further study is necessary. We examined whether men and women differed in LR, learning over time (LOT), and raw learning slope (RLS) in a healthy older adult sample, as well as whether these learning process variables predicted delayed memory equally for men and women.
Participants and Methods:203 cognitively healthy community-dwelling adults aged 50 and above (mean age 67.7; 133 women) were taken from a larger archival database; all were administered the RBANS in the context of other studies. LR, LOT, and RLS were calculated from the List Learning task. We examined whether men and women differed in these learning process measures. We then examined whether process measures differentially predicted performance on list recall and delayed memory index (DMI) of the RBANS for men and women.
Results:Men and women did not differ in age or years of education. After accounting for age and education, there were no gender differences on LR (p=.455) or RLS (p=.502) but LOT was lower in women (p=.013).
LR was equally predictive of list recall across genders (p<.001 for LR; p=.21 for gender). Correlations between LR and list recall were r=.65 (p<.001) for men and r=.56 (p<.001) for women. Both LR (p<.001) and gender (p=.008) predicted DMI but the interaction was nonsignificant. Correlations between LR and DMI were r=.52 for men (p<.001) and r=.46 for women (p<.001).
RLS predicted list recall equally across genders (p<.001 for RLS; p=.07 for gender; p=.18 for interaction). Correlations between RLS and list recall were r=.43 for men (p<.001) and r=.23 for women (p=.008). RLS (p<.001) and gender (p=.002; p=.19 for interaction) predicted DMI scores. Correlations between RLS and DMI were r=.31 for men (p=.008) and r=.21 for women (p=.015).
LOT predicted list recall equally across genders (p<.001; p=.97 for gender; p=.80 for interaction). Correlations between LOT and list recall were r=-.50 for men (p<.001) and r=-.60 for women (p<.001). LOT also predicted DMI equally across genders (p<.001; p=.084 for gender; p=.159 for interaction). Correlations between LOT and DMI were r=-.46 for men (p<.001) and r=-.49 for women (p<.001).
Conclusions:Of the three process variables, LR was the only one that did not show gender differences and was related to delayed memory outcomes with medium to large effect across both genders. Results suggest that LR can be used consistently across genders. As this sample consisted of healthy, independently-living older adults, future study should examine LR by gender in MCI and dementia samples.
6 Kynurenine/Tryptophan Ratio Moderates the Relationship Between Adiposity and Verbal Memory in Midlife
- Cherry Youn, Barbara Strasser, Dietmar Fuchs, Hirofumi Tanaka, Andreana P Haley
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 680-681
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Objective:
Tryptophan is an essential amino acid and precursor to several compounds of neurobiological significance, including serotonin, melatonin, and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide. However, the tryptophan-kynurenine metabolic pathway exhibits “double-edged sword” effects on neurons with neuroprotective metabolites and neurotoxic intermediates. Given its involvement in neurodegenerative diseases and recent reports of alterations in the pathway in response to obesity, we set out to investigate the potential moderating effect of the kynurenine/tryptophan ratio (KTR) on the relationship between adiposity and verbal memory performance in midlife. Our study is important in providing insight into mechanisms underlying the association between adiposity and cognition through the life course and sheds light on the role of metabolic risk factors before senescence. With the current epidemic of obesity and the expected age-related increase in dementia incidence, even a small association between obesity and cognitive decline may have far-reaching public health implications.
Participants and Methods:A total of 110 middle-aged adults aged 40-61 years participated in this cross-sectional study. Serum levels of kynurenine and tryptophan, body adiposity measured through bioimpedance, and non-contextual verbal memory performance on the California Verbal Learning Test, Second Edition (CVLT-II) were evaluated. Using factor analysis, the composite score of memory indices from Short Delay Free Recall, Long Delay Free Recall, and Long Delay Recognition tasks were calculated. We used linear regression models with the interaction between KTR and adiposity. Sex, age, years of education, and physical activity were included as covariates, as they predict cognitive performance.
Results:Higher KTR was associated with greater adiposity (p < 0.01). Linear regression analyses for assessing interaction effects indicated that KTR moderated the relation between adiposity and composite memory score (F(7, 100) = 5.22, p < 0.001, R2 = 0.27). These results were robust across individual memory indices and composite memory scores. These findings remained significant even with adjusting for relevant covariates. Interestingly, the marginal effects of adiposity on composite memory score were estimated to be statistically significant and negative (higher adiposity = poorer memory) only when KTR was low (< 0.03).
Conclusions:The present study indicates that KTR may influence the association between adiposity and verbal memory in midlife as KTR moderated the relationship between adiposity and composite memory score even after adjusting for relevant covariates. In contrast to the notion that high KTR is related to increases in neurotoxic metabolites such as quinolinic acid, individuals with high adiposity and low KTR exhibited the weakest memory performance. Unfortunately, our study did not include measurements of quinolinic acid or kynurenic acid, which may have neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory properties. Future studies expanding the number of measured KT metabolites could shed light on the interactions between obesity and KTR on memory function in midlife.
9 Connecting memory and functional brain networks in older adults: a resting state fMRI study
- Jori L Waner, Hanna K Hausman, Jessica N Kraft, Cheshire Hardcastle, Nicole D Evangelista, Andrew O’Shea, Alejandro Albizu, Emanuel M Boutzoukas, Emily J Van Etten, Pradyumna K Bharadwaj, Hyun Song, Samantha G Smith, Steven T DeKosky, Georg A Hishaw, Samuel S Wu, Michael Marsiske, Ronald Cohen, Gene E Alexander, Eric C Porges, Adam J Woods
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 527-528
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Objective:
Nonpathological aging has been linked to decline in both verbal and visuospatial memory abilities in older adults. Disruptions in resting-state functional connectivity within well-characterized, higherorder cognitive brain networks have also been coupled with poorer memory functioning in healthy older adults and in older adults with dementia. However, there is a paucity of research on the association between higherorder functional connectivity and verbal and visuospatial memory performance in the older adult population. The current study examines the association between resting-state functional connectivity within the cingulo-opercular network (CON), frontoparietal control network (FPCN), and default mode network (DMN) and verbal and visuospatial learning and memory in a large sample of healthy older adults. We hypothesized that greater within-network CON and FPCN functional connectivity would be associated with better immediate verbal and visuospatial memory recall. Additionally, we predicted that within-network DMN functional connectivity would be associated with improvements in delayed verbal and visuospatial memory recall. This study helps to glean insight into whether within-network CON, FPCN, or DMN functional connectivity is associated with verbal and visuospatial memory abilities in later life.
Participants and Methods:330 healthy older adults between 65 and 89 years old (mean age = 71.6 ± 5.2) were recruited at the University of Florida (n = 222) and the University of Arizona (n = 108). Participants underwent resting-state fMRI and completed verbal memory (Hopkins Verbal Learning Test - Revised [HVLT-R]) and visuospatial memory (Brief Visuospatial Memory Test - Revised [BVMT-R]) measures. Immediate (total) and delayed recall scores on the HVLT-R and BVMT-R were calculated using each test manual’s scoring criteria. Learning ratios on the HVLT-R and BVMT-R were quantified by dividing the number of stimuli (verbal or visuospatial) learned between the first and third trials by the number of stimuli not recalled after the first learning trial. CONN Toolbox was used to extract average within-network connectivity values for CON, FPCN, and DMN. Hierarchical regressions were conducted, controlling for sex, race, ethnicity, years of education, number of invalid scans, and scanner site.
Results:Greater CON connectivity was significantly associated with better HVLT-R immediate (total) recall (ß = 0.16, p = 0.01), HVLT-R learning ratio (ß = 0.16, p = 0.01), BVMT-R immediate (total) recall (ß = 0.14, p = 0.02), and BVMT-R delayed recall performance (ß = 0.15, p = 0.01). Greater FPCN connectivity was associated with better BVMT-R learning ratio (ß = 0.13, p = 0.04). HVLT-R delayed recall performance was not associated with connectivity in any network, and DMN connectivity was not significantly related to any measure.
Conclusions:Connectivity within CON demonstrated a robust relationship with different components of memory function as well across verbal and visuospatial domains. In contrast, FPCN only evidenced a relationship with visuospatial learning, and DMN was not significantly associated with memory measures. These data suggest that CON may be a valuable target in longitudinal studies of age-related memory changes, but also a possible target in future non-invasive interventions to attenuate memory decline in older adults.
3 Relation of Stress and Cortisol to Primacy and Recency Performance Patterns in Older Adult Caregivers of People with Dementia
- Taylor Lambertus, Alex Woody, Anna VanMeter, Peggy Zoccola, Julie Suhr
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 862
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Objective:
The serial position effect is the tendency to recall items at the beginning (primacy) and end (recency) of a word list best and middle items the worst, demonstrated by a 'U-shaped’ profile. Individuals with memory impairment often demonstrate a 'J-shaped’ profile, with a diminished primacy effect. An attenuated primacy effect could be one of the earliest indicators of cognitive decline in older adults. Chronic elevations in cortisol are related to hippocampal atrophy and decreased learning and recall. Given the rehearsal and encoding required to recall words at the beginning of a list, we hypothesized that reduced primacy would be related to higher cortisol levels, measured via hair cortisol concentration, in older adults, particularly caregivers of people with dementia (PWD), who are under increased stress.
Participants and Methods:Data were taken from a deidentified dataset of 60 community-dwelling older adults (> 50) with no evidence of dementia who participated in a larger study on memory and caregiving stress; 26 identified themselves as caregivers of PWD. The sample was 83% women and 98% White, with a mean age of 67.58 (SD=8.85) and 80% holding at least a college degree. Stress was measured with the Perceived Stress Scale. The List Learning and List Recall subtests from the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status were used to assess the serial position effect. Primacy and recency were determined by the first three and last three words on the list, respectively, and were measured for trials 1-4. Relative strength of primacy versus recency at delayed recall was also calculated such that positive scores indicate better primacy than recency and negative scores indicate worse primacy than recency (J-shaped profile). Hair samples were collected, and the first one cm of hair was used to assay hair cortisol concentration, reflecting the past month of cortisol.
Results:Caregivers were younger than non-caregivers (p<.001), but groups did not differ in gender (p=.412). Age was controlled for in all subsequent analyses. Caregivers reported more stress (p<.001), but groups were not different in hair cortisol (p=.093). On memory tasks, caregivers showed lower list learning raw scores (p=.002) and lower list recall raw score (p=.046); groups were not different in primacy learning (p=.114), but caregivers showed worse recency over learning trials (p<.001). Caregivers were not more likely to show the J-shaped serial position profile at recall (p=.285). Collapsed across groups, perceived stress was not related to cortisol (p=.124) but was related to recency (p=.001) and list learning raw (p=.004), but not list recall raw (p=.485) or primacy (p=.109). Cortisol was not related to primacy (p=.277) or recency (p=.538).
Conclusions:Contrary to predictions, caregivers were not worse on primacy but were worse on recency. Caregivers also reported more stress; collapsed across groups, stress was associated with recency performance. This may suggest that stress is related more to poor attention and short-term memory (recency) than encoding and recall related memory problems (primacy).
88 Light and Vigorous Bouts of Acute Aerobic Exercise Positively Impact Sustained Attention and Inhibition but not Pattern Separation in Young Adults
- Michael A. Melville, Jessica Stark, Kelly J. Hiersche, Michael Esterman, Scott M. Hayes
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 288-289
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Objective:
The current study had two primary objectives: 1) To assess the dose-response relationship between acute bouts of aerobic exercise intensity and performance in multiple cognitive domains (episodic memory, attention, and executive function) and 2) To replicate and extend the literature by examining the dose-response relationship between aerobic exercise intensity and pattern separation.
Participants and Methods:18 young adults (mean age = 21.6, sd = 2.6; mean education = 13.9, sd = 3.4; 50% female) were recruited from The Ohio State University and surrounding area (Columbus, OH). Participants completed control (no exercise), light intensity, and vigorous intensity exercise conditions across three counterbalanced appointments. For each participant, all three appointments occurred at approximately the same time of day with at least 2 days between appointments. Following the rest or exercise conditions and after an approximately 7 minute delay, participants completed a Mnemonic Similarity Task (MST; Stark et al., 2019) to assess pattern separation. This task was always administered first as we attempted to replicate previous studies and further clarify the relationship between acute bouts of aerobic exercise and pattern separation by implementing an exercise stimulus that varied in intensity. After the MST, three brief cognitive tasks (roughly 5 min each) were administered in a counterbalanced order: a gradual-onset continuous performance task (gradCPT; Esterman et al., 2013), the flanker task from the NIH toolbox, and a face-name episodic memory task. Here we report results from the gradCPT, which assesses sustained attention and inhibitory control. Heart rate and ratings of perceived exertion were collected to validate the rest and exercise conditions. Repeated-measures ANOVAs were used to assess the relationship between exercise condition and dependent measures of sustained attention and inhibitory control and pattern separation.
Results:One-way repeated-measures ANOVAs revealed a main effect of exercise condition on gradCPT task performance for task discrimination ability (d') and commission error rate (p’s < .05). Pairwise comparisons revealed task discrimination ability was significantly higher following the light intensity exercise condition versus the control condition. Commission error rate was significantly lower for both the light and vigorous exercise conditions compared to the control condition. For the MST, two-way repeated-measures ANOVAs revealed an expected significant main effect of lure similarity on task performance; however, there was not a significant main effect of exercise intensity on task performance (or a significant interaction).
Conclusions:The current study indicated that acute bouts of exercise improve both sustained attention and inhibitory control as measured with the gradCPT. We did not replicate previous work reporting that acute bouts of exercise improve pattern separation in young adults. Our results further indicate that vigorous exercise did not detrimentally impact or improve pattern separation performance. Our results indicate that light intensity exercise is sufficient to enhance sustained attention and inhibitory control, as there were no significant differences in performance following light versus vigorous exercise.
10 Female APOE ε4 Carriers with Slow Rates of Biological Aging Have Better Verbal Memory Performance Compared to Female Carriers with Faster Rates of Aging, Independent of Chronological Age, Education, and Depressive Symptoms.
- Burcu Kaplan, Deirdre M. O’Shea
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 324-325
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Objective:
The presence of an e4 allele of the apolipoprotein E gene (APOE ε4) is considered the strongest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in the US. Evidence suggests that APOE ε4 carriers have worse memory performances compared to APOE ε4 non-carriers in cognitively normal older adults and that female APOE ε4 carriers are at greater risk of AD compared to male carriers. Recent advancements in estimating biological age using DNA methylation markers may enhance understanding of the associations between sex and APOE ε4 on cognitive aging. Thus, the current study aimed to investigate whether associations between APOE ε4 status and memory vary according to rates of biological aging, using a DNA methylation age biomarker, in older men and women without dementia.
Participants and Methods:Cross-sectional data were obtained from 1771 older adults enrolled in the 2016 wave of the Health and Retirement Study (Mean age = 75, SD = 7; 57% female; 76% non-Hispanic white). The standardized residual from regressing chronological age on the epigenetic clock “DNAGrimAge” was used as a measure of the aging rate. A series of ANCOVAs with Bonferroni corrected post hoc pairwise tests, adjusting for education, white blood cell count, chronological age, and depressive symptoms were used to test the main and interaction effects of APOE ε4 status (non-carriers = 0; carriers = 1) and aging rates, defined as 1 standard deviation below (i.e., slow rate), or above (i.e., fast rate) sex-specific mean rate (i.e., average) of aging, on a standardized composite measure of verbal memory. Alpha was set at .05 and all raw scores were converted to z-score metric prior to analyses.
Results:APOE ε4 female carriers with slow rates of aging (n = 34) had significantly better memory performances compared to APOE ε4 female carriers with fast rates of aging (n = 41), mean difference = .61, p = .006, and average rates of aging (n = 170), mean difference = .44, p = .017. There was no effect of aging rate on memory in the female non-carriers and there were no significant differences in memory performances based on rates of aging in either male APOE ε4 carriers or non-carriers.
Conclusions:Although the presence of the APOE ε4 has previously been shown to represent a stronger risk of AD for women compared to men, results from the current study suggest that slower rates of aging in this high-risk group may confer protection against clinical symptoms (i.e., memory impairment). Conversely, faster than average aging in female APOE ε4 carriers may represent a group at greater risk of memory impairment due to AD. However, longitudinal studies with larger sample sizes are needed to evaluate the risk of dementia/memory impairment based on rates of aging in female APOE ε4 carriers.
13 Relationship Between Subjective Cognitive Decline and Episodic Memory Among Older Adults with and Without Neurocognitive Impairment
- Derek C Killingsworth, Michael J Persin, Eman Nabulsi, Rebekah Griffin, Jeanné M Dube, Harrison G Boynton, Danielle R Hardesty, Michael D Barnett
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 697
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Objective:
Previous research has found that subjective cognitive decline corresponds with assessed memory impairment and could even be predictive of neurocognitive impairment. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether a single self-report item of subjective cognitive decline corresponds with the results of a performance-based measure of episodic memory.
Participants and Methods:Older adults (n = 100; age 60-90) were given the single item measure of subjective cognitive decline developed by Verfaille et al. (2018).
Results:Those who endorsed subjective cognitive decline (n = 68) had lower scores on the CVLT-II long delay free recall than those who did not endorse such a decline (n = 32). Additionally, older adults with a neurocognitive diagnosis believed their memory was becoming worse at a higher proportion than those without.
Conclusions:While a single item of subjective cognitive decline should not be substituted for a comprehensive evaluation of memory, the results suggest that it may have utility as a screening item.