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Longitudinal change-change associations of cognition with cortical thickness and surface area

Lars Nyberg, Micael Andersson, Anders Lundquist

2023Aging Brain12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Age-related changes in cortical volumes are well established but relatively few studies probed its constituents, surface area (SA) and thickness (TH). Here we analyzed 10-year, 3-waves longitudinal data from a large sample of healthy individuals (baseline age = 55-80). The findings showed marked age-related changes of SA in frontal, temporal, and parietal association cortices, and Bivariate Latent Change Score models revealed significant SA-associations with changes in speed of processing in both the 5- and 10-year models. The corresponding results for TH revealed a late onset of thinning and significant associations with reduced cognition in the 10-year model only. Taken together, our findings suggest that cortical surface area shrinks and impacts information-processing capacity gradually in aging, whereas cortical thinning only manifests and impacts fluid cognition in advanced aging.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionBivariate analysisAssociation (psychology)Longitudinal studyLongitudinal sampleCognitive declinePsychologyNeuroscienceAudiologyDevelopmental psychologyMedicineInternal medicinePathologyMathematicsDiseasePsychotherapistStatisticsDementiaFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesNeural dynamics and brain functionNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
Longitudinal change-change associations of cognition with cortical thickness and surface area | Litcius