Home
HomeSite Index Maps & Directions Contact Us
Find a Doctor
Consumer Health Information
About University Health Systems
Patient and Visitor Information
Jobs
Graduate Medical Education
Our Hospitals
Pitt County Memorial Hospital
Bertie Memorial Hospital
Chowan Hospital
Heritage Hospital
The Outer Banks Hospital
Roanoke-Chowan Hospital
Cardiovascular Center
Children's Hospital
Leo Jenkins Cancer Center
Regional Rehabilitation Center
Trauma and Critical Care
Women's Services
Surgical Services
Outpatient Services
ViQuest
All Services
Quick Links








Maturity Brings Richer Memories
Family & Home

Family & Home
Articles that focus on overall health improvement with an emphasis on your family and home.

Maturity Brings Richer Memories
Brain area associated with higher-order thinking is responsible, study finds


(HealthDay News) -- While children and adults are similar when it comes to basic memory formation, adults create richer, more detailed contextual memories.

That's the conclusion of a new Massachusetts Institute of Technology study that included 49 people, ages 8 to 24.

The researchers said adults form richer memories because they have a more developed prefrontal cortex (PFC), an area of the brain associated with higher-order thinking, planning and reasoning.

"Activation in the PFC follows an upward slope with age in contextual memories. The older the subjects, the more powerful the activation in that area," senior author John Gabrieli, of MIT's McGovern Institute for Brain Research, department of brain and cognitive sciences, said in a prepared statement.

"This makes sense, because there's been a convergence of evidence that the PFC develops later than other brain regions, both functionally and structurally... But this is the first study that asks how this area matures and contributes to learning," Gabrieli said.

For this study, participants did memory exercises while their brain activity was recorded using functional magnetic resonance imaging. The researchers said their findings offer new information about how children learn.

The study was published in the Aug. 5 online edition of the journal Nature Neuroscience .

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians discusses age-related memory loss.

By Robert Preidt
SOURCE: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, news release, Aug. 5, 2007
Last Updated: July 2008
Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews LLC. All rights reserved.











 



Powered by Healthvision
Disclaimer Information Calendar of Events Privacy Practices Copyright 2005