Abstract:
Cognitive control involves the ability to flexibly adjust cognitive processing in
order to resist interference and promote goal-directed behaviour. Although frontal cortex
is considered to be broadly involved in cognitive control, the mechanisms by which
frontal brain areas implement control functions are unclear. Furthermore, aging is
associated with reductions in the ability to implement control functions and questions
remain as to whether unique cortical responses serve a compensatory role in maintaining
maximal performance in later years. Described here are three studies in which
electrophysiological data were recorded while participants performed modified versions
of the standard Sternberg task. The goal was to determine how top-down control is
implemented in younger adults and altered in aging. In study I, the effects of frequent
stimulus repetition on the interference-related N450 were investigated in a Sternberg
task with a small stimulus set (requiring extensive stimulus resampling) and a task with
a large stimulus set (requiring no stimulus resampling).The data indicated that constant
stimulus res amp ling required by employing small stimulus sets can undercut the effect
of proactive interference on the N450. In study 2, younger and older adults were tested
in a standard version of the Sternberg task to determine whether the unique frontal
positivity, previously shown to predict memory impairment in older adults during a
proactive interference task, would be associated with the improved performance when
memory recognition could be aided by unambiguous stimulus familiarity. Here, results
indicated that the frontal positivity was associated with poorer memory performance,
replicating the effect observed in a more cognitively demanding task, and showing that
stimulus familiarity does not mediate compensatory cortical activations in older adults. Although the frontal positivity could be interpreted to reflect maladaptive cortical
activation, it may also reflect attempts at compensation that fail to fully ameliorate agerelated
decline. Furthermore, the frontal positivity may be the result of older adults'
reliance on late occurring, controlled processing in contrast to younger adults' ability to
identify stimuli at very early stages of processing. In the final study, working memory
load was manipulated in the proactive interference Sternberg task in order to investigate
whether the N450 reflects simple interference detection, with little need for cognitive
resources, or an active conflict resolution mechanism that requires executive resources
to implement. Independent component analysis was used to isolate the effect of
interference revealing that the canonical N450 was based on two dissociable cognitive
control mechanisms: a left frontal negativity that reflects active interference resolution,
,
but requires executive resources to implement, and a right frontal negativity that reflects
global response inhibition that can be relied on when executive resources are minimal
but at the cost of a slowed response. Collectively, these studies advance understanding
of the factors that influence younger and older adults' ability to satisfy goal-directed
behavioural requirements in the face of interference and the effects of age-related
cognitive decline.