Title of article :
Predictive knowledge of stimulus relevance does not influence top-down suppression of irrelevant information in older adults
Author/Authors :
Zanto، نويسنده , , Theodore P. and Hennigan، نويسنده , , Kelly and ضstberg، نويسنده , , Mattias and Clapp، نويسنده , , Wesley C. and Gazzaley، نويسنده , , Adam، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
11
From page :
564
To page :
574
Abstract :
Our ability to focus attention on task-relevant stimuli and ignore irrelevant distractions is reflected by differential enhancement and suppression of neural activity in sensory cortices. Previous research has shown that older adults exhibit a deficit in suppressing task-irrelevant information, the magnitude of which is associated with a decline in working memory performance. However, it remains unclear if a failure to suppress is a reflection of an inability of older adults to rapidly assess the relevance of information upon stimulus presentation when they are not aware of the relevance beforehand. To address this, we recorded the electroencephalogram (EEG) in healthy older participants (aged 60—80 years) while they performed two different versions of a selective face/scene working memory task, both with and without prior knowledge as to when relevant and irrelevant stimuli would appear. Each trial contained two faces and two scenes presented sequentially followed by a 9 sec delay and a probe stimulus. Participants were given the following instructions: remember faces (ignore scenes), remember scenes (ignore faces), remember the xth and yth stimuli (where x and y could be 1st, 2nd, 3rd or 4th), or passively view all stimuli. Working memory performance remained consistent regardless of task instructions. Enhanced neural activity was observed at posterior electrodes to attended stimuli, while neural responses that reflected the suppression of irrelevant stimuli was absent for both tasks. The lack of significant suppression at early stages of visual processing was revealed by P1 amplitude and N1 latency modulation indices. These results reveal that prior knowledge of stimulus relevance does not modify early neural processing during stimulus encoding and does not improve working memory performance in older adults. These results suggest that the inability to suppress irrelevant information early in the visual processing stream by older adults is related to mechanisms specific to top-down suppression.
Keywords :
suppression , EEG , Aging , Working memory , selective attention
Journal title :
Cortex
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Cortex
Record number :
2300446
Link To Document :
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