Litcius/Paper detail

Metacognition, cortical thickness, and tauopathy in aging

Kailin Zhuang, Xi Chen, Kaitlin Cassady, Suzanne L. Baker, William J. Jagust

2022Neurobiology of Aging12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We investigated self-rating of cognitive task performance (self-appraisal) and the difference between self-rating and actual task performance (appraisal discrepancy) in cognitively healthy older adults and their relationship with cortical thickness and Alzheimer's disease (AD) biomarkers, amyloid and tau. All participants (N = 151) underwent neuropsychological testing and 1.5T structural magnetic resonance imaging. A subset (N = 66) received amyloid-PET with [11C] PiB and tau-PET with [18F] Flortaucipir. We found that worse performers had lower self-appraisal ratings, but still overestimated their performance, consistent with the Dunning-Kruger effect. Self-appraisal rating and appraisal discrepancy revealed distinct relationships with cortical thickness and AD pathology. Greater appraisal discrepancy, indicating overestimation, was related to thinning of inferior-lateral temporal, fusiform, and rostral anterior cingulate cortices. Lower self-appraisal was associated with higher entorhinal and inferior temporal tau. These results suggest that overestimation could implicate structural atrophy beyond AD pathology, while lower self-appraisal could indicate early behavioral alteration due to AD pathology, supporting the notion of subjective cognitive decline prior to objective deficits.

Topics & Concepts

TauopathyPsychologyNeuropsychologyAtrophyEntorhinal cortexCognitionMagnetic resonance imagingNeuroscienceDiseaseAudiologyPathologyMedicineHippocampusRadiologyNeurodegenerationDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesMemory and Neural Mechanisms