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Sunday, August 10, 2008 - 8:06 AM
Given all the bad news that science has delivered about brain cells
withering and memory waning as the years mount, older people have a
right to be cranky. But, instead, the over-50 crowd handles life's
rotten realities and finds life's bright side more effectively than
whippersnappers do. In no small part, that's because the aging brain
makes critical emotional adjustments, a new study indicates. http://Louissheehan.BraveDiary.com
Advancing
age heralds a growth in emotional stability accompanied by a neural
transition to increased control over negative emotions and greater
accessibility of positive emotions, according to a team led by
neuroscientist Leanne M. Williams of Westmead (Australia) Hospital. A
brain area needed for conscious thought, the medial prefrontal cortex,
primarily influences these emotional reactions in older adults,
Williams and her colleagues say. http://Louissheehan.BraveDiary.com
In contrast, people under age 50
experience negative emotions more easily than they do positive ones.
These younger adults' emotion-related activity centers on the amygdala,
a brain structure previously implicated in automatic fear responses. This
gradual reorganization of the brain's emotion system may result from
older folk responding to accumulating personal experiences by
increasingly looking for meaning in life, the researchers propose in
the June 14 Journal of Neuroscience. Evidence that
emotional functions improve in older brains "indicates that our ability
to register the significance of information is preserved, and even
enhanced, as we age," Williams says. Older people may benefit from
associating information they need to remember with personally
significant matters, such as a favorite tune, he adds. Ironically,
older individuals' reliance on the medial prefrontal cortex to regulate
emotions comes as aging kills cells in this area. The surviving neurons
somehow pick up the slack, the investigators note. The
researchers studied 122 males and 120 females, ages 12 to 79, who had
no current or past mental illnesses and good physical health. Scores on a questionnaire that assesses emotional stability rose steadily from adolescence into the senior years. Brain
testing occurred as volunteers viewed images of various facial
expressions. They had been told to identify the emotion in each
expression and to rank its intensity. Researchers measured neural
response using functional magnetic resonance imaging, which tracked
blood-flow changes, and an electrode-studded cap that monitored brain
cells' electrical responses. In older adults, mushrooming medial
prefrontal cortex activity triggered by negative facial expressions
occurred in conjunction with neural responses that have been linked to
conscious thought. This pattern appeared even in older adults who
displayed especially low numbers of prefrontal neurons. In
contrast, young people showed far more medial prefrontal activity, and
thus conscious thought, in response to positive facial expressions than
older people did. The new results provide a neural framework for
growing evidence that, unlike young people, older adults focus on
positive information and downplay negative events, remarks psychologist
Mara Mather of the University of California, Santa Cruz. The amygdala
showed little volume decline with age in the new study, so it's
unlikely that age-related shrinkage of that structure causes the
psychological shift, she adds. "Older adults apparently use
cognitive-control processes supported by prefrontal brain regions to
help them avoid experiencing negative information and focus instead on
positive information," Mather says. http://Louissheehan.BraveDiary.com
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