event

GT Neuro Seminar Series

Primary tabs

"Normal Brain Aging: Impact on Circuits Critical for Memory"

Carol Barnes, Ph.D.
Regents' Professor
Departments of Psychology, Neurology and Neuroscience
University of Arizona 


Aging is associated with specific impairments of learning and memory, some of which are similar to those caused by damage to temporal or frontal lobe structures. For example, healthy older humans, monkeys and rats all show poorer spatial, recognition and working memory, than do their younger counterparts. Rats and monkeys do not develop age-related pathology such as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s diseases, which makes them good models for assessing functional alterations associated with normal aging in humans. While many cellular properties of medial temporal lobe cells appear to be intact in aging animals, age-related impairments in synaptic function, plasticity and gene expression have been observed. Because information is represented by activity patterns across large populations of neurons, an understanding of the neural basis of cognitive changes in aging requires the examination of the dynamics of behaviorally-driven neural networks. Ensemble recording experiments are described that suggest fundamental changes in the storage and retrieval of information, as well as in high level perceptual processing in aging hippocampus and perirhinal cortical circuits. In addition, frontal lobe correlates of age-related changes working memory are discussed. The data presented are congruent with recent suggestions that rather than uniform deterioration, the aging brain shows region and cell-specific changes consistent with adaptation and compensation in these altered memory circuits.

Status

  • Workflow Status:Published
  • Created By:Floyd Wood
  • Created:01/29/2018
  • Modified By:Floyd Wood
  • Modified:02/16/2018