Neurobiological Mechanisms of Aging and Stress on Prospective Navigation

Description

Two hallmarks of both healthy aging and age-related disease are 1) memory and navigational deficits, particularly in orienting towards goal locations and planning how to navigate to them, and 2) increased susceptibility to stress and altered regulation of the stress response. However, there are marked individual differences in these age-related changes. The investigators' proposal will help characterize factors that contribute to this variability. Participants will be pseudorandomly assigned to stress-manipulated or control groups. The investigators will give both groups a novel immersive navigation task, validated by the PI in healthy young adults. This paradigm gives participants the opportunity to either (a) flexibly draw on spatial memory in order to plan efficient routes to goal locations, or (b) fall back on inefficient, but cognitively less-demanding, stimulus-response associations (i.e., habits). Using neuroimaging and behavioral measures, the investigators' protocol will test whether experimentally-induced stress leads individuals to bring fewer details about future locations to mind when route planning, and whether such restricted prospective thought ultimately biases participants towards relatively inflexible, habitual actions.

Conditions

Aging, Anxiety, Memory Impairment

Study Overview

Study Details

Study overview

Two hallmarks of both healthy aging and age-related disease are 1) memory and navigational deficits, particularly in orienting towards goal locations and planning how to navigate to them, and 2) increased susceptibility to stress and altered regulation of the stress response. However, there are marked individual differences in these age-related changes. The investigators' proposal will help characterize factors that contribute to this variability. Participants will be pseudorandomly assigned to stress-manipulated or control groups. The investigators will give both groups a novel immersive navigation task, validated by the PI in healthy young adults. This paradigm gives participants the opportunity to either (a) flexibly draw on spatial memory in order to plan efficient routes to goal locations, or (b) fall back on inefficient, but cognitively less-demanding, stimulus-response associations (i.e., habits). Using neuroimaging and behavioral measures, the investigators' protocol will test whether experimentally-induced stress leads individuals to bring fewer details about future locations to mind when route planning, and whether such restricted prospective thought ultimately biases participants towards relatively inflexible, habitual actions.

Neurobiological Mechanisms of Aging and Stress on Prospective Navigation

Neurobiological Mechanisms of Aging and Stress on Prospective Navigation

Condition
Aging
Intervention / Treatment

-

Contacts and Locations

Atlanta

Center for Advance Brain Imaging, Atlanta, Georgia, United States, 30318

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

For general information about clinical research, read Learn About Studies.

Eligibility Criteria

  • * adults 65-80
  • * U.S. citizens or permanent residents
  • * who speak fluent English
  • * willing to come to Georgia Tech to participate in group testing sessions.
  • * Individuals will be carefully screened using IRB-approved procedures for safety contraindications to MRI and electrical shock stimulation
  • * (e.g., metal or electrical implants, heart arrhythmia, or medication affecting the cardiovascular system \[e.g. beta-blockers\]).
  • * Epilepsy
  • * Dementia
  • * Parkinson's disease
  • * history of stroke or seizure
  • * psychiatric disorders
  • * untreated depression or emotional conditions
  • * Attention Deficit Disorder
  • * Multiple Sclerosis
  • * uncontrolled hyper- or hypo-tension
  • * untreated Diabetes
  • * Sickle Cell Anemia
  • * regularly use illegal or psychoactive drugs (e.g., cocaine, alcohol abuse, etc).
  • * Additionally, individuals scoring \< 3 on WAIS-R forward span, \< 2 on WAIS-R backward span, and failing to name more than 2 vegetable names will be excluded from the study. These exclusions will insure that persons with mild cognitive impairment or typical indications of clinical dementia will be not participate in the research.

Ages Eligible for Study

65 Years to 80 Years

Sexes Eligible for Study

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Collaborators and Investigators

Georgia Institute of Technology,

Thackery I Brown, Ph.D., PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR, Georgia Institute of Technology

Study Record Dates

2025-06-01