The Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (Cam-CAN) study protocol: a cross-sectional, lifespan, multidisciplinary examination of healthy cognitive ageing

被引:399
作者
Shafto, Meredith A. [1 ]
Tyler, Lorraine K. [1 ]
Dixon, Marie [1 ]
Taylor, Jason R. [2 ,3 ]
Rowe, James B. [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Cusack, Rhodri [6 ]
Calder, Andrew J. [3 ]
Marslen-Wilson, William D. [1 ,3 ]
Duncan, John [3 ,7 ]
Dalgleish, Tim [3 ]
Henson, Richard N. [3 ]
Brayne, Carol [8 ]
Matthews, Fiona E. [9 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Psychol, Cambridge CB2 3EB, England
[2] Univ Manchester, Sch Psychol Sci, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
[3] MRC Cognit & Brain Sci Unit, Cambridge CB2 7EF, England
[4] Univ Cambridge, Dept Clin Neurosci, Cambridge CB2 3EB, England
[5] Behav & Clin Neurosci Inst, Cambridge, England
[6] Univ Western Ontario, Brain & Mind Inst, London, ON N6A 5B7, Canada
[7] Univ Oxford, Dept Expt Psychol, Oxford OX1 3UD, England
[8] Univ Cambridge, Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Publ Hlth & Primary Care, Cambridge CB2 3EB, England
[9] Inst Publ Hlth, MRC Biostat Unit, Cambridge CB2 0SR, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
Healthy ageing; Brain ageing; Brain imaging; Epidemiology; Cognition; Magnetoencephalography; Functional MRI; Structural MRI; Brain networks; Lifespan; EMOTION RECOGNITION; WORKING-MEMORY; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; FACIAL SIGNALS; CONNECTIVITY; CAPACITY; AMYGDALA; ADULTS; DAMAGE; PLASTICITY;
D O I
10.1186/s12883-014-0204-1
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: As greater numbers of us are living longer, it is increasingly important to understand how we can age healthily. Although old age is often stereotyped as a time of declining mental abilities and inflexibility, cognitive neuroscience reveals that older adults use neural and cognitive resources flexibly, recruiting novel neural regions and cognitive processes when necessary. Our aim in this project is to understand how age-related changes to neural structure and function interact to support cognitive abilities across the lifespan. Methods/Design: We are recruiting a population-based cohort of 3000 adults aged 18 and over into Stage 1 of the project, where they complete an interview including health and lifestyle questions, a core cognitive assessment, and a self-completed questionnaire of lifetime experiences and physical activity. Of those interviewed, 700 participants aged 18-87 (100 per age decile) continue to Stage 2 where they undergo cognitive testing and provide measures of brain structure and function. Cognition is assessed across multiple domains including attention and executive control, language, memory, emotion, action control and learning. A subset of 280 adults return for in-depth neurocognitive assessment in Stage 3, using functional neuroimaging experiments across our key cognitive domains. Formal statistical models will be used to examine the changes that occur with healthy ageing, and to evaluate age-related reorganisation in terms of cognitive and neural functions invoked to compensate for overall age-related brain structural decline. Taken together the three stages provide deep phenotyping that will allow us to measure neural activity and flexibility during performance across a number of core cognitive functions. This approach offers hypothesis-driven insights into the relationship between brain and behaviour in healthy ageing that are relevant to the general population. Discussion: Our study is a unique resource of neuroimaging and cognitive measures relevant to change across the adult lifespan. Because we focus on normal age-related changes, our results may contribute to changing views about the ageing process, lead to targeted interventions, and reveal how normal ageing relates to frail ageing in clinicopathological conditions such as Alzheimer's disease.
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页数:25
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