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Age-Related Differences in Cortical Activity during a Visuo-Spatial Working Memory Task with Facial Stimuli

Emotion, importantly displayed by facial expressions, is one of the most significant memory modulators. The interaction between memory and the different emotional valences change across lifespan, while young adults (YA) are expected to better recall negative events (Negativity Bias Hypothesis), olde...

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Autores principales: Belham, Flávia Schechtman, Satler, Corina, Garcia, Ana, Tomaz, Carlos, Gasbarri, Antonella, Rego, Artur, Tavares, Maria Clotilde H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3777883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24069447
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075778
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author Belham, Flávia Schechtman
Satler, Corina
Garcia, Ana
Tomaz, Carlos
Gasbarri, Antonella
Rego, Artur
Tavares, Maria Clotilde H.
author_facet Belham, Flávia Schechtman
Satler, Corina
Garcia, Ana
Tomaz, Carlos
Gasbarri, Antonella
Rego, Artur
Tavares, Maria Clotilde H.
author_sort Belham, Flávia Schechtman
collection PubMed
description Emotion, importantly displayed by facial expressions, is one of the most significant memory modulators. The interaction between memory and the different emotional valences change across lifespan, while young adults (YA) are expected to better recall negative events (Negativity Bias Hypothesis), older adults (OA) tend to focus on positive stimuli (Positivity Effect Hypothesis). This research work aims at verifying whether cortical electrical activity of these two age groups would also be differently influenced by emotional valences in a visuo-spatial working memory task. 27 YA (13 males) and 25 OA (14 males), all healthy volunteers, underwent electroencephalographic recordings (21 scalp electrodes montage), while performing the Spatial Delayed Recognition Span Task using a touch screen with different stimuli categories: neutral, positive and negative faces and geometric pictures. YA obtained higher scores than OA, and showed higher activation of theta and alpha bands in the frontal and midline regions, besides a more evident right-hemispheric asymmetry on alpha band when compared to OA. For both age groups, performance in the task was worse for positive faces than to negative and to neutral faces. Facial stimuli induced a better performance and higher alpha activation on the pre-frontal region for YA, and on the midline, occipital and left temporal regions for OA when compared to geometric figures. The superior performance of YA was expected due to the natural cognitive deficits connected to ageing, as was a better performance with facial stimuli due to the evolutionary importance of faces. These results were related to cortical activity on areas of importance for action-planning, decision making and sustained attention. Taken together, they are in accordance with the Negativity Bias but do not support the Positivity Effect. The methodology used was able to identify age-related differences in cortical activity during emotional mnemonic processing and may be interesting to future investigations.
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spelling pubmed-37778832013-09-25 Age-Related Differences in Cortical Activity during a Visuo-Spatial Working Memory Task with Facial Stimuli Belham, Flávia Schechtman Satler, Corina Garcia, Ana Tomaz, Carlos Gasbarri, Antonella Rego, Artur Tavares, Maria Clotilde H. PLoS One Research Article Emotion, importantly displayed by facial expressions, is one of the most significant memory modulators. The interaction between memory and the different emotional valences change across lifespan, while young adults (YA) are expected to better recall negative events (Negativity Bias Hypothesis), older adults (OA) tend to focus on positive stimuli (Positivity Effect Hypothesis). This research work aims at verifying whether cortical electrical activity of these two age groups would also be differently influenced by emotional valences in a visuo-spatial working memory task. 27 YA (13 males) and 25 OA (14 males), all healthy volunteers, underwent electroencephalographic recordings (21 scalp electrodes montage), while performing the Spatial Delayed Recognition Span Task using a touch screen with different stimuli categories: neutral, positive and negative faces and geometric pictures. YA obtained higher scores than OA, and showed higher activation of theta and alpha bands in the frontal and midline regions, besides a more evident right-hemispheric asymmetry on alpha band when compared to OA. For both age groups, performance in the task was worse for positive faces than to negative and to neutral faces. Facial stimuli induced a better performance and higher alpha activation on the pre-frontal region for YA, and on the midline, occipital and left temporal regions for OA when compared to geometric figures. The superior performance of YA was expected due to the natural cognitive deficits connected to ageing, as was a better performance with facial stimuli due to the evolutionary importance of faces. These results were related to cortical activity on areas of importance for action-planning, decision making and sustained attention. Taken together, they are in accordance with the Negativity Bias but do not support the Positivity Effect. The methodology used was able to identify age-related differences in cortical activity during emotional mnemonic processing and may be interesting to future investigations. Public Library of Science 2013-09-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3777883/ /pubmed/24069447 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075778 Text en © 2013 Belham et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Belham, Flávia Schechtman
Satler, Corina
Garcia, Ana
Tomaz, Carlos
Gasbarri, Antonella
Rego, Artur
Tavares, Maria Clotilde H.
Age-Related Differences in Cortical Activity during a Visuo-Spatial Working Memory Task with Facial Stimuli
title Age-Related Differences in Cortical Activity during a Visuo-Spatial Working Memory Task with Facial Stimuli
title_full Age-Related Differences in Cortical Activity during a Visuo-Spatial Working Memory Task with Facial Stimuli
title_fullStr Age-Related Differences in Cortical Activity during a Visuo-Spatial Working Memory Task with Facial Stimuli
title_full_unstemmed Age-Related Differences in Cortical Activity during a Visuo-Spatial Working Memory Task with Facial Stimuli
title_short Age-Related Differences in Cortical Activity during a Visuo-Spatial Working Memory Task with Facial Stimuli
title_sort age-related differences in cortical activity during a visuo-spatial working memory task with facial stimuli
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3777883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24069447
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075778
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