Interpreting age-related changes and differences in brain structure, activation and functional connectivity is an ongoing challenge. Ambiguous terminology is a major source of this challenge. For example, the terms “compensation”, “maintenance”, and “reserve” are used in different ways by researchers. Most of the time, they disagree about the kind of evidence or patterns of results required to interpret findings related to these concepts.

 

Classified as: Nature Neuroscience, neuroscience, Psychiatry, McGill Department of Psychiatry, McGill’s Department of Psychiatry
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Published on: 11 Oct 2018

McGill Newsroom

Research sheds new light on what constitutes healthy aging of the brain

The inability to remember details, such as the location of objects, begins in early midlife (the 40s) and may be the result of a change in what information the brain focuses on during memory formation and retrieval, rather than a decline in brain function, according to a study by McGill University researchers.

Classified as: McGill University, faculty of medicine, Natasha Rajah, Brain Imaging Centre at McGill University’s Douglas Institute, memory formation and retrieval, Brain function, McGill’s Department of Psychiatry, midlife, middle-age, Science and Technologie
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Published on: 12 Jul 2016
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