Age and the neural network of personal familiarity |
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Authors: | Donix Markus Petrowski Katja Jurjanz Luisa Huebner Thomas Herold Ulf Baeumler Damaris Amanatidis Eva C Poettrich Katrin Smolka Michael N Holthoff Vjera A |
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Institution: | Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Clinic Carl Gustav Carus, Technische Universit?t Dresden, Dresden, Germany. markus.donix@uniklinikum-dresden.de |
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Abstract: | BackgroundAccessing information that defines personally familiar context in real-world situations is essential for the social interactions and the independent functioning of an individual. Personal familiarity is associated with the availability of semantic and episodic information as well as the emotional meaningfulness surrounding a stimulus. These features are known to be associated with neural activity in distinct brain regions across different stimulus conditions (e.g., when perceiving faces, voices, places, objects), which may reflect a shared neural basis. Although perceiving context-rich personal familiarity may appear unchanged in aging on the behavioral level, it has not yet been studied whether this can be supported by neuroimaging data.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate the neural network associated with personal familiarity during the perception of personally familiar faces and places. Twelve young and twelve elderly cognitively healthy subjects participated in the study. Both age groups showed a similar activation pattern underlying personal familiarity, predominantly in anterior cingulate and posterior cingulate cortices, irrespective of the stimulus type. The young subjects, but not the elderly subjects demonstrated an additional anterior cingulate deactivation when perceiving unfamiliar stimuli.Conclusions/SignificanceAlthough we found evidence for an age-dependent reduction in frontal cortical deactivation, our data show that there is a stimulus-independent neural network associated with personal familiarity of faces and places, which is less susceptible to aging-related changes. |
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