Navigational strategy switching in ageing
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Date
28/11/2014Author
Harris, Mathew Alan
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Abstract
With advancing age, many cognitive faculties deteriorate, and navigation abilities
may be among those most affected. The majority of previous work investigating
navigation impairments in ageing has focused on allocentric processing, attributing
deficits to hippocampal dysfunction. However, real-world navigation is dependent
upon numerous different strategies, as well as the ability to flexibly switch between
them. Outside the context of navigation, it has been demonstrated that strategy
switching, thought to be coordinated by regions of prefrontal cortex and the locus
coeruleus-noradrenergic system, is also susceptible to the effects of ageing. Deficits
in navigational strategy switching, and prefrontal or noradrenergic dysfunction, are
therefore also likely to contribute to age-related navigation impairments. The work
presented in this thesis aimed to explore age-related impairments in strategy
switching within the context of navigation, and the underlying neural mechanisms in
terms of a prefrontal-noradrenergic model of switching.
The studies presented in Chapter Three assessed the use of allocentric and egocentric
navigational strategies by young and older people. Older participants tended to use
an egocentric strategy where an allocentric strategy was required, possibly due to a
difficulty in switching to the appropriate allocentric strategy. In Chapter Four, I
provide an account of two studies directly assessing navigational strategy switching,
using two different tasks based in virtual reality. The first study utilised a virtual
adaptation of the plus maze task, involving switching between an allocentric place
strategy and an egocentric response strategy, and demonstrated that older participants
were specifically impaired at switching to the place strategy. The second study used a
more realistic task set in a virtual town environment, which involved switching from
an egocentric route-following strategy to an allocentric wayfinding strategy, and also
demonstrated an age-related deficit in switching to an allocentric strategy.
In Chapter Five, I begin to explore the mechanisms underlying impaired navigational
strategy switching in ageing. Firstly, I describe a further behavioural study that used
variants of the virtual plus maze and a navigational gambling task to demonstrate a contribution of impaired decision making to the deficit in switching to an allocentric
strategy. This indicates that the deficit can be attributed, at least in part, to prefrontal
dysfunction. A second study presented in the same chapter demonstrated that
practising orienteering does not protect against decline in navigational strategy
switching ability with ageing. Chapter Six provides an account of my direct
assessment of the neural bases of navigational strategy switching using functional
magnetic resonance imaging. In young subjects, I found some evidence in support of
the roles of prefrontal regions in navigational strategy switching. However, I was
unable to complete development of a task suitable for assessing age differences in
functional activation of brain regions involved in navigational strategy switching.
The final experimental study, included in Chapter Seven, assessed pupil size and
heart rate as physiological correlates of noradrenergic activity during performance of
the virtual plus maze. Both young and old participants demonstrated a noradrenergic
response to all strategy changes, suggesting that impairments are more likely
attributable to dysfunction of prefrontal cortex than of the locus coeruleus, although
some subtle effects suggested that noradrenergic dysfunction does have some effect
on navigational strategy switching deficits. In the same chapter, I report the results of
a meta-analysis of data from five of the preceding studies, suggesting that deficits in
both strategy switching and allocentric processing combine to produce a greater
impairment in switching to an allocentric strategy.
The main finding of this series of studies is that navigational strategy switching is
impaired in ageing, which may contribute to the more widely reported difficulties
that older people have with navigation. My work also provides evidence in support
of a prefrontal-noradrenergic model of navigational strategy switching, and suggests
that dysfunction of prefrontal cortex and, to a lesser extent, the locus coeruleus-noradrenergic
system is responsible for decline in navigational strategy switching
ability with ageing. In conclusion, this thesis draws attention to the important role of
deficient executive processing and dysfunction of extra-hippocampal brain regions in
age-related navigation impairments.