The Adaptive Brain: Aging and Neurocognitive Scaffolding
The University of Texas at Dallas · University of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas · +1 more institution
Abstract
There are declines with age in speed of processing, working memory, inhibitory function, and long-term memory, as well as decreases in brain structure size and white matter integrity. In the face of these decreases, functional imaging studies have demonstrated, somewhat surprisingly, reliable increases in prefrontal activation. To account for these joint phenomena, we propose the scaffolding theory of aging and cognition (STAC). STAC provides an integrative view of the aging mind, suggesting that pervasive increased frontal activation with age is a marker of an adaptive brain that engages in compensatory scaffolding in response to the challenges posed by declining neural structures and function. Scaffolding is…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 34.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 138
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Neurocognitive
- Psychology
- Cognition
- Cognitive aging
- Neuroscience
- Working memory
- Cognitive psychology
- Scaffold protein
- Decent work and economic growth