Brain functional characterization of response-code conflict in dual-tasking and its modulation by age

Author:

Paas Oliveros Lya K123ORCID,Cieslik Edna C123ORCID,Pieczykolan Aleks4ORCID,Pläschke Rachel N23ORCID,Eickhoff Simon B123ORCID,Langner Robert123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-7: Brain and Behaviour), Forschungszentrum Jülich , Jülich 52425 , Germany

2. Institute of Systems Neuroscience , Medical Faculty, , Düsseldorf 40225 , Germany

3. Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf , Medical Faculty, , Düsseldorf 40225 , Germany

4. Rheinische Fachhochschule – University of Applied Sciences , Cologne 50923 , Germany

Abstract

AbstractCrosstalk between conflicting response codes contributes to interference in dual-tasking, an effect exacerbated in advanced age. Here, we investigated (i) brain activity correlates of such response-code conflicts, (ii) activity modulations by individual dual-task performance and related cognitive abilities, (iii) task-modulated connectivity within the task network, and (iv) age-related differences in all these aspects. Young and older adults underwent fMRI while responding to the pitch of tones through spatially mapped speeded button presses with one or two hands concurrently. Using opposing stimulus–response mappings between hands, we induced conflict between simultaneously activated response codes. These response-code conflicts elicited activation in key regions of the multiple-demand network. While thalamic and parietal areas of the conflict-related network were modulated by attentional, working-memory and task-switching abilities, efficient conflict resolution in dual-tasking mainly relied on increasing supplementary motor activity. Older adults showed non-compensatory hyperactivity in left superior frontal gyrus, and higher right premotor activity was modulated by working-memory capacity. Finally, connectivity between premotor or parietal seed regions and the conflict-sensitive network was neither conflict-specific nor age-sensitive. Overall, resolving dual-task response-code conflict recruited substantial parts of the multiple-demand network, whose activity and coupling, however, were only little affected by individual differences in task performance or age.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

National Institute of Mental Health

Helmholtz Portfolio Theme Supercomputing and Modeling for the Human Brain

European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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