Lecture 12 - Cognitive Aging Flashcards
1
Q
Aging effects the ______ cortex more than any other area
A
- prefrontal cortex
- last areas to myelinate are the first to deteriorate
- WM and LTM communicate less efficiently
2
Q
Episodic memory
A
- conscious recollection of info from a specific event or point in time
- decreases w/ age
- ## autobiographical mem - remembering info/events from own life
3
Q
Autobiographical memory bump
A
- the age at which most memories are pulled from
4
Q
Flashbulb memories
A
- traumatic or happy memory that is thought to be easily memorable
- confidence in these memories are much higher despite not being any more reliable than other memories
5
Q
Non-Episodic memory
A
- remains consistent with age
- procedural memory - motor, perceptual, or cog operations
- remains constant
- semantic memory - general knowledge, facts, concepts
- improves over time in educated individuals
6
Q
Source memory
A
- ability to remember the source of a familiar event
- ability to determine if event was imagined or actually experienced
- failures are more common w/ age
7
Q
False memory
A
remembering items or events that did not occur
8
Q
Positivity bias
A
older adults have better memory for emotional info, especially when the info is positive
9
Q
Stereotype threat
A
- awareness of negativity stereotypes about the group
- anxiety when put in position that might confirm stereotype
10
Q
Age-related changes in language
A
- may be affected by hearing loss or reductions in attention and processing speed
- no change in comprehension
- lang production declines
11
Q
Social aspects of language
A
- reminiscing about the past
- difficulty focusing speech
- elderspeak
12
Q
Communication predicament model
A
- age related changes - appearance and physical changes that lead to young person to treat individual as old
- elderspeak - infantilizing and patronizing speech
- further declines - lack of stimulation from being treated as a dependent child
13
Q
AZ disease
A
- progressive, incurable deterioration of key areas of the brain
- hallmark is a loss of WM and difficulty performing familiar tasks
14
Q
Diagnostic characteristics of AZ
A
- senile plaques - deposits of beta-amyloid
- neurofibrillary tangles - dead and dying neurons tangled together
- APOE variants - E2 reduces risk, E4 increases risk
- APP, PSEN1, PSEN2 give definitive diagnosis associated with early onset AZ
15
Q
Confirmation of AZ cannot be made until?
A
autopsy
16
Q
Risk factors of AZ
A
- Age - 90% of cases occur after 65 y.o.
- lifestyle factors (high cholesterol, high BP, tobacco, obesity)
- CV disease
- TBIs like CTE
- low education and occupational attainment
17
Q
CTE
A
- chronic traumatic encephalopathy
- type of dementia
- due to Hx of TBIs
- common in athletes and veterans
- similar symptoms to AZ
18
Q
Aerobic exercise
A
- CV conditioning in which breathing controls the amount of O2 that makes it to the muscles to help them burn fuel and move
- reduced risk of: CV disease, stroke, AZ
- improved memory and cognition
19
Q
Brain games
A
- are not beneficial bc skills are not transferable to other areas
- benefits are not maintained over time
- placebo affect observed
20
Q
Learning new skills
A
- cognitively challenging (requires attention, has many steps) activities strengthen brain networks
- risk may decrease as much as 12% for each new activity