Age differentiation within gray matter, white matter, and between memory and white matter in an adult life span cohort

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Abstract

It is well established that brain structures and cognitive functions change across the life span. A long-standing hypothesis called “age differentiation” additionally posits that the relations between cognitive functions also change with age. To date, however, evidence for age-related differentiation is mixed, and no study has examined differentiation of the relationship between brain and cognition. Here we use multigroup structural equation models (SEMs) and SEM trees to study differences within and between brain and cognition across the adult lifespan(18–88years) inalarge(N > 646, closelymatchedacrosssexes), population-derivedsampleof healthyhumanadults from the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (www.cam-can.org). After factor analyses of gray matter volume (from T1-and T2-weighted MRI) and white matter organization (fractional anisotropy from diffusion-weighted MRI), we found evidence for the differentiation of gray and white matter, such that the covariance between brain factors decreased with age. However, we found no evidence for age differentiation among fluid intelligence, language, and memory, suggesting a relatively stable covariance pattern among cognitive factors. Finally, we observed a specific pattern of age differentiation between brain and cognitive factors, such that a white matter factor, which loaded most strongly on the hippocampal cingulum, became less correlated with memory performance in later life. These patterns are compatible with the reorganization of cognitive functions in the face of neural decline, and/or with the emergence of specific subpopulations in old age.

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de Mooij, S. M. M., Henson, R. N. A., Waldorp, L. J., & Kievit, R. A. (2018). Age differentiation within gray matter, white matter, and between memory and white matter in an adult life span cohort. Journal of Neuroscience, 38(25), 5826–5836. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1627-17.2018

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