Cognitive Neuroscience of Aging
Linking Cognitive and Cerebral Aging
Edited by Roberto Cabeza, Lars Nyberg, and Denise Park
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Cognitive neuroscience of aging: Emergence of a new discipline, Roberto Cabeza, Lars Nyberg, Denise C. Park
I. IMAGING MEASURES
2. The aging brain observed in vivo: Differential changes and their modifiers, Naftali Raz
3. The role of dopamine receptors in cognitive aging, Lars Backman and Lars Farde
4. Electrophysiological and optical measures of cognitive aging, Monica Fabiani and Gabriele Gratton
5. A critical evaluation of BOLD functional MRI in the study of cognitive aging, Adam H. Gazzaley and Mark D'Esposito
6. The relationship between brain activity, cognitive performance and aging: The case of memory, Michael D. Rugg and Alexa M. Morcom
II. BASIC CONGITIVE PROCESSES
7. Age-related changes in neural activity during visual perception and attention, David J. Madden, Wythe L. Whiting and Scott A. Huettel
8. The cognitive neuroscience of aging and working memory, Patricia A. Reuter-Lorenz and Ching-Yune C. Sylvester
9. Long-term memory and aging: A cognitive neuroscience perspective, Denise A. Park and Angela G. Gutchess
10. The neural basis of age-related declines in prospective memory, Robert West
III CLINICAL AND APPLIED ISSUES
11. Three principles for congitive aging research: Multiple causes sequelae, variance in expression and response, and the need for integrative theory, Iandy L. Buckner
12. Functional connectivity during memory tasks in healthy aging and dementia, Cheryl L. Grady
13. Cognitive training in health aging: A cognitive neuroscience perspective, Lars Nyberg
IV MODELS IN COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE OF AGING
14. Age-related changes in hemospheric organization, Sander Daselaar and Roberto Cabeza
15. Neurocomputational perspectives linking neuromodulation, processing noise, representational distinctiveness, and cognitive aging, Shu-Chen Li