Cortex
Volume 46, Issue 4 , Pages 434-450, April 2010

Individual differences in aging and cognitive control modulate the neural indexes of context updating and maintenance during task switching

  • Daniel Adrover-Roig
  • ,
  • Francisco Barceló

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Ed. Beatriu de Pinós #12, Department of Psychology, University of the Balearic Islands, Cra. Valldemossa km. 7.5, 07122 Palma de Mallorca, Spain.

Clinical Neuropsychology, Institut Universitari d'Investigació en Ciències de la Salut (IUNICS), University of the Balearic Islands, Spain

Received 10 December 2008; received in revised form 27 March 2009 and 28 July 2009; accepted 25 September 2009. published online 05 November 2009.

Abstract 

This study aimed to explore the combined influence of age and cognitive control on the behavioural and electrophysiological indicators of local, restart and mixing costs. Two groups of middle-aged (49–60y.o., N=40) and older (61–80y.o., N=40) adults were split according to their overall z-score in a composite of six neuropsychological measures of executive function. All participants performed a task-cueing version of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) adapted for measuring event-related potentials, whereby tonal cues instructed to switch or repeat the task rule. A single-task condition with identical sensory and motor response demands was used to aid interpretation of behavioural and brain responses to cues and target events. Working memory updating of stimulus–response mappings, as putatively indexed by local switch costs and cue-locked P3 activity (350–460msec post-cue onset), was preserved in both older and low control adults. In turn, low control adults showed larger restart costs and enhanced cue-locked P2 amplitudes (190–250msec) in the task-switching condition only, suggesting lesser preparatory control in the presence of interference. Low control adults showed comparatively larger mixing costs and smaller cue-locked fronto-central slow negativities (500–700msec), suggesting an inefficient online maintenance of task-set information over time. In contrast, target-locked brain responses were mostly sensitive to age-related effects, with older adults showing two well-known effects: (1) an “anterior shift” in target P3 activity (350–460msec), and (2) an attenuation of fronto-central slow negativities in single-task and task-switching conditions, respectively. The additive association found between age and cognitive control for different behavioural indexes of task-switch costs suggests a differential influence of these factors upon two successive information processing stages: individual differences in cognitive control mainly influenced the neural indexes of preparatory task-set activation and maintenance, whereas age-related effects influenced the neural indexes of target response selection and task execution.

Keywords: Cognitive aging, Context updating, P300, Slow potentials, Task-switch costs

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PII: S0010-9452(09)00275-5

doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2009.09.012

Cortex
Volume 46, Issue 4 , Pages 434-450, April 2010