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Age Effects on Preattentive and Early Attentive Auditory Processing of Redundant Stimuli: Is Sensory Gating Affected by Physiological Aging?

The frontal hypothesis of aging predicts an age-related decline in cognitive functions requiring inhibitory or attentional regulation. In Alzheimer's disease, preattentive gating out of redundant information is impaired. Our study aimed to examine changes associated with physiological aging in...

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Published in:The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences Biological sciences and medical sciences, 2011-10, Vol.66A (10), p.1043-1053
Main Authors: Gmehlin, Dennis, Kreisel, Stefan H., Bachmann, Silke, Weisbrod, Matthias, Thomas, Christine
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c391t-24d672422e387d26c4d3242c98f7edca644fb6be216ab569d120f0865f68d3383
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container_issue 10
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container_title The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences
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creator Gmehlin, Dennis
Kreisel, Stefan H.
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Thomas, Christine
description The frontal hypothesis of aging predicts an age-related decline in cognitive functions requiring inhibitory or attentional regulation. In Alzheimer's disease, preattentive gating out of redundant information is impaired. Our study aimed to examine changes associated with physiological aging in both pre- and early attentive inhibition of recurrent acoustic information. Using a passive double-click paradigm, we recorded mid-latency (P30-P50) and late-latency (N100 and P200) evoked potentials in healthy young (26 ± 5 years) and healthy elderly subjects (72 ± 5 years). Physiological aging did not affect auditory gating in amplitude measures. Both age groups exhibited clear inhibition in preattentive P50 and attention-modulated (N100) components, whereas P30 was not attenuated. Irrespective of age, the magnitude of inhibition differed significantly, being most pronounced for N100 gating. Inhibition of redundant information seems to be preserved with physiological aging. Early attentive N100 gating showed the maximum effect. Further studies are warranted to evaluate sensory gating as a suitable biomarker of underlying neurodegenerative disease.
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source Oxford Journals Online
subjects Adult
Aged
Aging
Aging - psychology
Alzheimer's disease
Attention - physiology
Brain
Case-Control Studies
Cognitive ability
Electroencephalography
Evoked Potentials, Auditory - physiology
Female
Gerontology
Humans
Male
Neuropsychological Tests
Physiology
Sensory Gating - physiology
Statistics, Nonparametric
title Age Effects on Preattentive and Early Attentive Auditory Processing of Redundant Stimuli: Is Sensory Gating Affected by Physiological Aging?
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