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Exploring interhemispheric collaboration in older compared to younger adults
Authors:Barbara J. Cherry  Mariana Yamashiro  Erin Anderson  Christopher Barrett  Maheen M. Adamson  Joseph B. Hellige
Affiliation:1. California State University, Fullerton, CA 92831, USA;2. Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90025, USA;3. Stanford University, Los Angeles, CA 94305, USA;4. Loyola Marymount University, CA 90045, USA
Abstract:Physical and Name Identity letter-matching tasks were used to explore differences in interhemispheric collaboration in younger and older adults. To determine whether other factors might also be related to across/within-hemisphere processing or visual field asymmetries, neuropsychological tests measuring frontal/executive functioning were administered, and comparisons were made for participants split into low and high efficiency groups based on performance on the letter-matching tasks. A Task by Across/Within interaction was found for both groups, but with a stronger within-hemisphere advantage for the Physical Task and a weaker across-hemisphere advantage for the Name Task for older participants. More efficient groups and better performers on several neuropsychological tasks showed a reduced across-hemisphere advantage for the Name Identity task. Findings suggest that computational complexity, specific task demands, and perhaps trade-offs between age-related changes in gray and white matter all contribute to whether processing loads are distributed across or within hemispheres as we age.
Keywords:Interhemispheric collaboration   Aging   Interhemispheric interaction   Hemispheric asymmetry   Corpus callosum
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