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Behavioral and fMRI evidence that arousal enhances bottom-up selectivity in young but not older adults.


ABSTRACT: The locus coeruleus-noradrenergic system integrates signals about arousal states throughout the brain and helps coordinate cognitive selectivity. However, age-related changes in this system may impact how arousal coordinates selectivity in older adults. To examine this, we compared how increases in emotional arousal modulates cognitive selectivity for images differing in perceptual salience in young and older adults. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we found that relative to older adults, hearing an arousing sound enhanced young adults' bottom-up processing and incidental memory for high versus low salience category-selective body images. We also examined how arousing sounds impacted a top-down goal to detect dot-probes that appeared immediately after high or low salience images. We found that young adults were slower to detect probes appearing after high salience body images on arousing trials, whereas older adults showed this pattern on non-arousing trials. Taken together, our findings show that arousal's effect on selectivity changes with age and differs across bottom-up and top-down processing.

SUBMITTER: Gallant SN 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9805381 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Behavioral and fMRI evidence that arousal enhances bottom-up selectivity in young but not older adults.

Gallant Sara N SN   Kennedy Briana L BL   Bachman Shelby L SL   Huang Ringo R   Cho Christine C   Lee Tae-Ho TH   Mather Mara M  

Neurobiology of aging 20220819


The locus coeruleus-noradrenergic system integrates signals about arousal states throughout the brain and helps coordinate cognitive selectivity. However, age-related changes in this system may impact how arousal coordinates selectivity in older adults. To examine this, we compared how increases in emotional arousal modulates cognitive selectivity for images differing in perceptual salience in young and older adults. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we found that relative to older ad  ...[more]

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