Attentional Filtering in Young and Older Adulthood

To date, research on cognitive aging has treated attention as a unitary resource that operates according to a single mechanism of top-down selection. However, contemporary theoretical models of attention propose that it is a distributed resource, embedded in distinct cortical subsystems, and operate...

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Main Author: Schmitz, Taylor W.
Other Authors: De Rosa, Eve
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34878
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-348782014-02-21T03:56:47ZAttentional Filtering in Young and Older AdulthoodSchmitz, Taylor W.attentionagingperceptionneuroimaging0623To date, research on cognitive aging has treated attention as a unitary resource that operates according to a single mechanism of top-down selection. However, contemporary theoretical models of attention propose that it is a distributed resource, embedded in distinct cortical subsystems, and operates in a manner that reflects the properties of those subsystems. For instance, perceptual attention is thought to originate in posterior sensory subsystems and filter competing unattended input prior to encoding, resulting in early selection of attended information. Executive attention, by contrast, is thought to originate in frontal control subsystems and filter unattended input after encoding, resulting in late selection of attended information. Guided by a distributed resource model, the work described here focuses on how healthy advanced aging influences early selection mechanisms embedded in posterior subsystems, perceptual encoding, and the relationship with frontal subsystems mediating late selection. To examine perceptual attention in isolation, object discrimination tasks were devised in which perceptual competition between repeated objects was manipulated while holding demand on executive control constant. Cortical mechanisms of early selection were probed using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) indices of neural response and adaptation. Evidence of an age-related impairment in early selection was detected across two fMRI experiments. Unlike young adults, unattended objects not only interfered with perceptual encoding in older adults, but were co-encoded along with the contents of attended input. Age impairments in early selection were also associated with greater reliance on frontally-mediated late selection resources, and, reduced functional connectivity with basal forebrain nuclei. In sum, the results indicate that with increasing age, frontal control subsystems become increasingly encumbered with compensatory redistribution of function from the perceptual cortices, possibly due to loss of central cholinergic integrity. Many well-described age-related deficits of executive attention may therefore represent a consequence of impaired early selection, rather than its cause.De Rosa, Eve2012-112012-12-19T19:07:21ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-12-19T19:07:21Z2012-12-19Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/34878en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic attention
aging
perception
neuroimaging
0623
spellingShingle attention
aging
perception
neuroimaging
0623
Schmitz, Taylor W.
Attentional Filtering in Young and Older Adulthood
description To date, research on cognitive aging has treated attention as a unitary resource that operates according to a single mechanism of top-down selection. However, contemporary theoretical models of attention propose that it is a distributed resource, embedded in distinct cortical subsystems, and operates in a manner that reflects the properties of those subsystems. For instance, perceptual attention is thought to originate in posterior sensory subsystems and filter competing unattended input prior to encoding, resulting in early selection of attended information. Executive attention, by contrast, is thought to originate in frontal control subsystems and filter unattended input after encoding, resulting in late selection of attended information. Guided by a distributed resource model, the work described here focuses on how healthy advanced aging influences early selection mechanisms embedded in posterior subsystems, perceptual encoding, and the relationship with frontal subsystems mediating late selection. To examine perceptual attention in isolation, object discrimination tasks were devised in which perceptual competition between repeated objects was manipulated while holding demand on executive control constant. Cortical mechanisms of early selection were probed using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) indices of neural response and adaptation. Evidence of an age-related impairment in early selection was detected across two fMRI experiments. Unlike young adults, unattended objects not only interfered with perceptual encoding in older adults, but were co-encoded along with the contents of attended input. Age impairments in early selection were also associated with greater reliance on frontally-mediated late selection resources, and, reduced functional connectivity with basal forebrain nuclei. In sum, the results indicate that with increasing age, frontal control subsystems become increasingly encumbered with compensatory redistribution of function from the perceptual cortices, possibly due to loss of central cholinergic integrity. Many well-described age-related deficits of executive attention may therefore represent a consequence of impaired early selection, rather than its cause.
author2 De Rosa, Eve
author_facet De Rosa, Eve
Schmitz, Taylor W.
author Schmitz, Taylor W.
author_sort Schmitz, Taylor W.
title Attentional Filtering in Young and Older Adulthood
title_short Attentional Filtering in Young and Older Adulthood
title_full Attentional Filtering in Young and Older Adulthood
title_fullStr Attentional Filtering in Young and Older Adulthood
title_full_unstemmed Attentional Filtering in Young and Older Adulthood
title_sort attentional filtering in young and older adulthood
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34878
work_keys_str_mv AT schmitztaylorw attentionalfilteringinyoungandolderadulthood
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