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GRT2100B PSYCHOSOCIAL ASPECTS OF AGING MATURATIONAL CHANGES PART II CLASS #17 November 6, 2013 PROFESSOR: MELISSA BRASGOLD
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging FINAL EXAM INFO Date: Tuesday, December 17 th Time: 7 pm – 10pm Location: MNT 202 (Has changed & can again!) Worth: 40% Covering class material, reading & videos from: Class #17 – Class #24 incl.
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging READING FOR FINAL EXAM P. 17-19: Start at “the dying process”. P. 36-39: End at “Medicare”. P. 42-45: End at “Productivity & Creativity”. P. 72-73: Compression of Morbidity section only. P. 90 – 96: End at “Stress as a characteristic of the environment. P. 102-103: Coping & Aging section only P. 105-114: Exclude “Wisdom & optimal aging” section. *Readings marked in red are material that was not covered in class, but which will be tested on the exam. Any updates will be relayed via email.
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging TODAY’S OUTLINE Cognitive aging as a process of decline: Fact or Fiction?
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging ALMOST NO BRAIN!
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging “Old” Pessimistic View of aging brain Brain Damage Model of aging Universal, Pervasive, and irreversible cognitive decline. ↓ brain activation (under-activation) = deficits. (Cabeza et al., 2004; Raz, 2004). *
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging Supporting the “Old” View Neural correlates of age-related decline Lower Choline and DA = attention and memory ↓ ( Castner & Goldman, 2004). Gray matter volume shrinkage (Resnick et al., 2003;Salat et al., 2004). Gray matter Pervasive white matter loss, especially prefrontal cortex (Madden et al., 2004).white matter
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging Gray Matter Gray matter: the nervous tissue in brain and spinal cord made. Nerve impulses are produced here and sent from here via white matter = Responsible for information processing. Back
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging White Matter White matter: nerve axons connecting grey matter areas to each other + carry nerve impulses between neurons. Parts of brain and spinal cord responsible for information transmission. Back
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging New View of Aging Brain: Over-activation What is Compensation? What is De-differentiation? *
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging 4 Trends Indicating Over-Activation 1. Different Activation Patterns 2. Homologousity/Bilateral Activation Patterns 3. Senior specific Optimal Performance activation 4. Task-Specific Over-activation *
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging Trend #1: Activation Patterns 1. Different Activation Patterns: YA & OA matched on behavioral performance show different activation patterns Ventral versus Dorsal. Cheryl Grady et al. (1992) PET Study.
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging Trend #2: Bilateral Activation/Homolgousity 2. Bilateral Activation Patterns: OA show bilateral activation under conditions producing highly lateralized activity in YA. Study #1: TMS (Rossi et al., 2004) YA retrieval impaired when unilateral TMS applied. OA retrieval impaired when TMS applied to either hemisphere.
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging Homologousity: Spatial Working Memory Study #2 (Reuter-Lorenz et al, 2000): Memory for 3 dots that appear on a screen for 0.5 s. Brain activity of OA and YA who performed task with high accuracy were compared.
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging Findings Both groups activated: a) Left and Right parietal cortex regions b) Right frontal regions OA - Homologous network of left hemisphere sites. *
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging Trends 3 & 4: Evidence of Over-activation 3. Senior specific Optimal Performance activation: Additional areas for optimal performance = possible compensation. 4. Task-Specific Over-activation: Task dependency seen on executive functions, motor control, episodic, auto- biographical & working memory.
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging What is Older Brain Compensating for? A) New areas activated to compensate. Gutchess et al. (2005) Study. Overactivation not always accompanied by underactivation. Maybe its because of our methods?
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging What is Older Brain Compensating for? B) New areas activated because OA increased difficulty and effort (Banich & Colleagues, 98). Additional recruitment seen in YA brains with increased task difficulty. *
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging Compensation & Dedifferentiation? Both? Compensation could lead to dedifferentiation or vice versa (Reuter-Lorenz et al., 1999). Future challenge: to determine when age-related activation patterns signal compensation, declining functional specialization, or some combination.
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging SOME EXTRA’S http://www.authorstream.com/Presentation/phildavi -73152-memory-test-aging-geriatrics- memorytestfortheaging-product-training-manuals- ppt-powerpoint/ http://www.authorstream.com/Presentation/phildavi -73152-memory-test-aging-geriatrics- memorytestfortheaging-product-training-manuals- ppt-powerpoint/ http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=JsWsaE9aRhQ
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging The 2 Hemispheres
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GRT 2100: Psychosocial Aspects of Aging READING AHEAD Class #19 & 20, 21 & 22 Stress & Coping - Course pack pp. 90-104 Housing - Course pack pp. 36-39 Class #24 – Elder Abuse Course pack p.35
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