Alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brain

Exerting inhibitory control is a cognitive ability mediated by functions known to decline with age. The goal of this study is to add to the mechanistic understanding of cortical inhibition during motor control in aged brains. Based on behavioral findings of impaired inhibitory control with age we hy...

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Main Authors: Marlene eBoenstrup, Julian eHagemann, Christian eGerloff, Paul eSauseng, Friedhelm C Hummel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Subjects:
EEG
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00193/full
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spelling doaj-9e7b257f216d4d42bc76d1d28b215eb32020-11-24T22:19:38ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience1663-43652015-10-01710.3389/fnagi.2015.00193150288Alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brainMarlene eBoenstrup0Julian eHagemann1Christian eGerloff2Paul eSauseng3Friedhelm C Hummel4University Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfUniversity Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfUniversity Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfLudwig-Maximilians-University MunichUniversity Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfExerting inhibitory control is a cognitive ability mediated by functions known to decline with age. The goal of this study is to add to the mechanistic understanding of cortical inhibition during motor control in aged brains. Based on behavioral findings of impaired inhibitory control with age we hypothesized that elderly will show a reduced or a lack of EEG alpha-power increase during tasks that require motor inhibition. Since inhibitory control over movements has been shown to rely on prior motor memory formation, we investigated cortical inhibitory processes at two points in time - early after learning and after an overnight consolidation phase and hypothesized an overnight increase of inhibitory capacities. Young and elderly participants acquired a complex finger movement sequence and in each experimental session brain activity during execution and inhibition of the sequence was recorded with multi-channel EEG. We assessed cortical processes of sustained inhibition by means of task-induced changes of alpha oscillatory power. During inhibition of the learned movement, young participants showed a significant alpha power increase at the sensorimotor cortices whereas elderly did not. Interestingly, for both groups, the overnight consolidation phase improved up-regulation of alpha power during sustained inhibition. This points to deficits in the generation and enhancement of local inhibitory mechanisms at the sensorimotor cortices in aged brains. However, the alpha power increase in both groups implies neuroplastic changes that strengthen the network of alpha power generation over time in young as well as elderly brains.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00193/fullEEGexecutive controlcortical inhibitionhealthy agingneuroplasticity.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marlene eBoenstrup
Julian eHagemann
Christian eGerloff
Paul eSauseng
Friedhelm C Hummel
spellingShingle Marlene eBoenstrup
Julian eHagemann
Christian eGerloff
Paul eSauseng
Friedhelm C Hummel
Alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brain
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
EEG
executive control
cortical inhibition
healthy aging
neuroplasticity.
author_facet Marlene eBoenstrup
Julian eHagemann
Christian eGerloff
Paul eSauseng
Friedhelm C Hummel
author_sort Marlene eBoenstrup
title Alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brain
title_short Alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brain
title_full Alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brain
title_fullStr Alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brain
title_full_unstemmed Alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brain
title_sort alpha oscillatory correlates of motor inhibition in the aged brain
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
issn 1663-4365
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Exerting inhibitory control is a cognitive ability mediated by functions known to decline with age. The goal of this study is to add to the mechanistic understanding of cortical inhibition during motor control in aged brains. Based on behavioral findings of impaired inhibitory control with age we hypothesized that elderly will show a reduced or a lack of EEG alpha-power increase during tasks that require motor inhibition. Since inhibitory control over movements has been shown to rely on prior motor memory formation, we investigated cortical inhibitory processes at two points in time - early after learning and after an overnight consolidation phase and hypothesized an overnight increase of inhibitory capacities. Young and elderly participants acquired a complex finger movement sequence and in each experimental session brain activity during execution and inhibition of the sequence was recorded with multi-channel EEG. We assessed cortical processes of sustained inhibition by means of task-induced changes of alpha oscillatory power. During inhibition of the learned movement, young participants showed a significant alpha power increase at the sensorimotor cortices whereas elderly did not. Interestingly, for both groups, the overnight consolidation phase improved up-regulation of alpha power during sustained inhibition. This points to deficits in the generation and enhancement of local inhibitory mechanisms at the sensorimotor cortices in aged brains. However, the alpha power increase in both groups implies neuroplastic changes that strengthen the network of alpha power generation over time in young as well as elderly brains.
topic EEG
executive control
cortical inhibition
healthy aging
neuroplasticity.
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00193/full
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