Dorsal and ventral fronto-amygdala networks underlie risky decision-making in age-related cognitive decline

Author:

Ren PingORCID,Ma Manxiu,Zhuang Yuchuan,Huang Jiayin,Tan Meiling,Wu Donghui,Luo Guozhi

Abstract

AbstractOlder adults often have difficulty in making decisions under uncertainty, increasing the risk of financial exploitation. However, it is still under investigation about the extent to which cognitive decline influences risky decision-making and the underlying neural correlates. We hypothesized that the individual differences of risk-taking behavior depend on cognitive integrity, in which the dorsal and ventral fronto-amygdala connectivity would play dissociable roles. In the current study, thirty-six young and 51 older adults were tested with the Iowa gambling task combing resting-state and task-related functional magnetic resonance imaging. The results showed significant changes in behaviors and the fronto-amygdala network in older adults relative to young adults. More importantly, age-effect on risk-taking behaviors was remarkably different in cognitively normal and impaired older adults. In resting-state analysis, task performance was positively correlated with the ventral fronto-amygdala connectivity and negatively correlated with the dorsal fronto-amygdala connectivity in cognitively impaired older adults, compared with cognitively normal individuals. Furthermore, task-related analysis confirmed the relationships between dorsal/ventral fronto-amygdala network and risk-taking behaviors depending on cognitive integrity. These findings indicate that the fronto-amygdala network is crucial for understanding altered risky decision-making in aging, suggesting dissociable contributions of the dorsal and ventral pathways in the context of cognitive decline.

Funder

Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province

Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Program

Sanming Project of Medicine in Shenzhen

Guangdong Natural Science Foundation for Major Cultivation Project

Shenzhen Fund for Guangdong Provincial High-level Clinical Key Specialties

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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