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Hippocampal activity during the transverse patterning task declines with cognitive competence but not with age

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  • Vera Maria Leirer
  • Christian Wienbruch
  • Isabella Paul-Jordanov
  • Stephan Kolassa
  • Thomas Elbert
  • Iris- Tatjana Kolassa
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Article number113
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>2010
<mark>Journal</mark>BMC Neuroscience
Volume11
Number of pages10
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Background
The hippocampus is a brain region that is particularly affected by age-related morphological changes. It is generally assumed that a loss in hippocampal volume results in functional deficits that contribute to age-related cognitive decline. In a combined cross-sectional behavioural and magnetoencephalography (MEG) study we investigated whether hippocampal-associated neural current flow during a transverse patterning task - which requires learning relational associations between stimuli - correlates with age and whether it is modulated by cognitive competence.

Results
Better performance in several tests of verbal memory, verbal fluency and executive function was indeed associated with higher hippocampal neural activity. Age, however, was not related to the strength of hippocampal neural activity: elderly participants responded slower than younger individuals but on average produced the same neural mass activity.

Conclusions
Our results suggest that in non-pathological aging, hippocampal neural activity does not decrease with age but is rather related to cognitive competence.