Mnemonic But Not Contextual Feedback Signals Defy Dedifferentiation in the Aging Early Visual Cortex
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Society for Neuroscience
Materia
Aging Dedifferentiation Feedback
Date
2024-04-17Referencia bibliográfica
Ehrlich, Isabelle, et al. Mnemonic But Not Contextual Feedback Signals Defy Dedifferentiation in the Aging Early Visual Cortex. Journal of Neuroscience 17 April 2024, 44 (16) e0607232023; https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0607-23.2023
Sponsorship
European Research Council Starting Grant (ERC-2018-StG-PIVOTAL-758898); German Research Foundation (Project ID 327654276, SFB 1315, “Mechanisms and Disturbances in Memory Consolidation: From Synapses to Systems”); Hessisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst (HMWK; “The Adaptive Mind” Project); Volkswagen Stiftung (Project ID 9B326); Junta de Andalucía - Consejería de Universidad, Investigación e Innovación (P21_00148); Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council (BBSRC) BB/V010956/1 (“Layer-specific cortical feedback dynamics”)Abstract
Perception is an intricate interplay between feedforward visual input and internally generated feedback signals that comprise concurrent contextual and time-distant mnemonic (episodic and semantic) information. Yet, an unresolved question is how the composition of feedback signals changes across the lifespan and to what extent feedback signals undergo age-related dedifferentiation, that is, a decline in neural specificity. Previous research on this topic has focused on feedforward perceptual representation and episodic memory reinstatement, suggesting reduced fidelity of neural representations at the item and category levels. In this fMRI study, we combined an occlusion paradigm that filters feedforward input to the visual cortex and multivariate analysis techniques to investigate the information content in cortical feedback, focusing on age-related differences in its composition. We further asked to what extent differentiation in feedback signals (in the occluded region) is correlated to differentiation in feedforward signals. Comparing younger (18–30 years) and older female and male adults (65–75 years), we found that contextual but not mnemonic feedback was prone to age-related dedifferentiation. Semantic feedback signals were even better differentiated in older adults, highlighting the growing importance of generalized knowledge across ages. We also found that differentiation in feedforward signals was correlated with differentiation in episodic but not semantic feedback signals. Our results provide evidence for age-related adjustments in the composition of feedback signals and underscore the importance of examining dedifferentiation in aging for both feedforward and feedback processing.