Local-global interference is modulated by age, sex and anterior corpus callosum size

被引:60
作者
Mueller-Oehring, Eva M.
Schulte, Tilman
Raassi, Carla
Pfefferbaum, Adolf
Sullivan, Edith V.
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci MC 5723, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] SRI Int, Program Neurosci, Menlo Pk, CA 94025 USA
关键词
age; sex; interhemispheric; visuospatial; corpus callosum; hierarchical letters;
D O I
10.1016/j.brainres.2007.01.062
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
To identify attentional and neural mechanisms affecting global and local feature extraction, we devised a global-local hierarchical letter paradigm to test the hypothesis that aging reduces functional cerebral lateralization through corpus callosum (CC) degradation. Participants (37 men and women, 26-79 years) performed a task requiring global, local, or global+local attention and under-went structural MRI for CC measurement. Although reaction time (RT) slowed with age, all participants had faster RTs to local than global targets. This local precedence effect together with greater interference from incongruent local information and greater response conflict from local targets each correlated with older age and smaller callosal genu (anterior) areas. These findings support the hypothesis that the CC mediates lateralized local-global processes by inhibition of task-irrelevant information under selective attention conditions. Further, with advancing age smaller genu size leads to less robust inhibition, thereby reducing cerebral lateralization and permitting interference to influence processing. Sex was an additional modifier of interference, in that callosum-interference relationships were evident in women but not in men. Regardless of age, smaller splenium (posterior) areas correlated with less response facilitation from repetition priming of global targets in men, but with greater response facilitation from repetition priming of local targets in women. Our data indicate the following dissociation: anterior callosal structure was associated with inhibitory processes (i.e., interference from incongruency and response conflict), which are vulnerable to the effects of age and sex, whereas posterior callosal structure was associated with facilitation processes from repetition priming dependent on sex and independent of age. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:189 / 205
页数:17
相关论文
共 133 条
  • [1] MORPHOMETRY OF THE SYLVIAN FISSURE AND THE CORPUS-CALLOSUM, WITH EMPHASIS ON SEX-DIFFERENCES
    ABOITIZ, F
    SCHEIBEL, AB
    ZAIDEL, E
    [J]. BRAIN, 1992, 115 : 1521 - 1541
  • [2] The effects of divided attention on encoding- and retrieval-related brain activity: A PET study of younger and older adults
    Anderson, ND
    Iidaka, T
    Cabeza, R
    Kapur, S
    McIntosh, AR
    Craik, FIM
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2000, 12 (05) : 775 - 792
  • [3] Prefrontal regions play a predominant role in imposing an attentional 'set': evidence from fMIRI
    Banich, MT
    Milham, MP
    Atchley, RA
    Cohen, NJ
    Webb, A
    Wszalek, T
    Kramer, AF
    Liang, ZP
    Barad, V
    Gullett, D
    Shah, C
    Brown, C
    [J]. COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 2000, 10 (1-2): : 1 - 9
  • [4] INTERHEMISPHERIC INTERACTION - HOW DO THE HEMISPHERES DIVIDE-AND-CONQUER A TASK
    BANICH, MT
    BELGER, A
    [J]. CORTEX, 1990, 26 (01) : 77 - 94
  • [5] INTERHEMISPHERIC PROCESSING IN LEFT-HANDERS AND RIGHT-HANDERS
    BANICH, MT
    GOERING, S
    STOLAR, N
    BELGER, A
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 1990, 54 (3-4) : 197 - 208
  • [6] HEMISPHERIC-DIFFERENCES IN GLOBAL AND LOCAL PROCESSING DEPENDENT ON EXPOSURE DURATION
    BLANCA, MJ
    ZALABARDO, C
    GARCIACRIADO, F
    SILES, R
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1994, 32 (11) : 1343 - 1351
  • [7] Hemispheric differences in global versus local processing: Still unclear
    Boles, DB
    Karner, TA
    [J]. BRAIN AND COGNITION, 1996, 30 (02) : 232 - 243
  • [8] Conflict monitoring and anterior cingulate cortex: an update
    Botvinick, Matthew M.
    Cohen, Jonathan D.
    Carter, Cameron S.
    [J]. TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES, 2004, 8 (12) : 539 - 546
  • [9] Conflict monitoring and cognitive control
    Botvinick, MM
    Braver, TS
    Barch, DM
    Carter, CS
    Cohen, JD
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2001, 108 (03) : 624 - 652
  • [10] The fate of global precedence with age
    Bruyer, R
    Scailquin, JC
    [J]. EXPERIMENTAL AGING RESEARCH, 2000, 26 (04) : 285 - 314