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Age-related dedifferentiation of learning systems: an fMRI study of implicit and explicit learning
Authors:Nancy A. Dennis  Roberto Cabeza
Affiliation:aCenter for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA;bDepartment of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA
Abstract:
Abundant research finds that in young adults explicit learning (EL) is more dependent on the medial temporal lobes (MTL) whereas implicit learning (IL) is more dependent on the striatum. Using fMRI, we investigated age differences in each task and whether this differentiation is preserved in older adults. Results indicated that, while young recruited the MTL for EL and striatum for IL, both activations were significantly reduced in older adults. Additionally, results indicated that older adults recruited the MTL for IL, and this activation was significantly greater in older compared with young adults. A significant Task × Age interaction was found in both regions—with young preferentially recruiting the MTL for EL and striatum for IL, and older adults showing no preferential recruit for either task. Finally, young adults demonstrated significant negative correlations between activity in the striatum and MTL during both the EL and IL tasks. These correlations were attenuated in older adults. Taken together results support dedifferentiation in aging across memory systems.
Keywords:Dedifferentiation   Aging   fMRI   Implicit   Explicit   Learning   Medial temporal lobes   Striatum   Declarative   Nondeclarative   Memory
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