Here's An Exciting New Clue About Why Some People Stay Sharp As They Age
Ever heard someone say you can't teach an old dog new tricks? New research suggests it may be time to retire that phrase, though the study was small and preliminary.
As it turns out, some older people may be able to learn certain things just as well as younger people by harnessing the power of a part of the brain that young, healthy people typically don't use in the same way.
Gray Matter, White Matter
The brain can be thought of as having two major components: gray matter and white matter. We rely on our neuron-rich gray matter for everything from seeing and hearing to processing emotions, exerting self-control, and learning new information.
White matter, by contrast, contains all of the brain's wiring - the complex web of twisting fibers that carry information across different parts of the brain. White matter may also help us learn and could play a critical role in overall cognitive function and intelligence, scientists are now discovering.
As we age, our gray matter often shrinks or degrades, making seemingly everyday tasks tougher.
But what if the brain had a sort of backup generator, an extra source of power that would fire up when our primary engines were down?
It appears that in some older people, the white matter does just that.
Flexible Brains
For the new study, published Nov. 19 in Nature Communications, researchers took a look at 39 healthy volunteers, some young, some older. In the older people with the most flexible white matter, learning a new bit of visual information was just about as easy as it was for younger people who naturally just used their gray matter.
The finding seems to contradict a widely accepted notion about aging: that as we get older, our brains lose their flexibility, making it tough for us to remember things and learn new skills. In some older people, the new study suggests, precisely the opposite happens. In these people, the brain retains the ability to adapt, but in a different brain area than in young people.
"As far as visual tasks are concerned, some older people can learn just as well as younger people," says Brown University neuroscience professor and study coauthor Takeo Watanabe.
Nature Communications
Good Learners And Bad Learners
To arrive at their findings, researchers had 21 volunteers aged 19 to 32 and 18 volunteers aged 65 to 80 look at screens and push a button when they noticed certain changes in the displayed patterns.
The volunteers did the task once before participating in a training session designed to improve their results, and a then a second time afterwards. During the training, volunteers were taught to memorize a letter that appeared on the screen in between the time when the pattern was changed. Memorizing the letter helped them stay focused on the center of the display.
That training helped younger and older participants improve their performance on the task equally, and researchers wanted to see if anything in their brains could explain why.
Before and after the task and the training, the researchers scanned the volunteers' brains. They monitored part of the visual cortex, the gray matter section of the brain responsible for visual learning, to see if it changed. They also looked closely at the white matter beneath it.
While younger learners had far more changes in their visual cortex, made up of grey matter, older learners showed more changes in their white matter overall.
Based on their results, the older volunteers seem to be in two distinct groups: "good learners" whose accuracy in flagging the pattern change went up by more than 20% after they were trained, and "poor learners," who improved by less than 20%.
The more an older person's white matter changed, the researchers found, the better he or she learned.
"We know that older people's brains are declining," Watanabe says. "But older and younger people are faced with the same learning demands in everyday life, and it appears that some older people can compensate for those losses."
While the finding is for now limited to the effects of a very specific kind of visual training in a very small number of people, it provides interesting clues about how older brains might be compensating for - and even canceling out - some of the gray matter changes that have previously been seen as a marker of cognitive decline.
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