It is unclear whether healthy aging influences concreteness effects (i.e., the processing advantage seen for concrete over abstract words) and its associated neural mechanisms. We conducted an fMRI study on young and older healthy adults performing auditory lexical decisions on concrete vs. abstract words. We found that spoken comprehension of concrete and abstract words appears relatively preserved for healthy older individuals, including the concreteness effect. This preserved performance was supported by altered activity in left hemisphere regions including the inferior and middle frontal gyri, angular gyrus, and fusiform gyrus. This pattern is consistent with age-related compensatory mechanisms supporting spoken word processing. © 2016 ...
It is widely believed that language function tends to show little age-related performance decline. I...
The ability to perceive and produce speech undergoes important changes in late adulthood. The goal o...
Previous research has shown that adults process concrete words faster when they share a taxonomic (s...
It is unclear whether healthy aging influences concreteness effects (i.e., the processing advantage ...
It is unclear whether healthy aging influences concreteness effects (i.e., the processing advantage ...
Normal subjects and patients with aphasia exhibit a 'concreteness effect' during lexical tasks. Rece...
Background: Evidence for the brain mechanisms recruited when processing concrete versus abstract con...
Concrete words that are readily imagined are better remembered than abstract words. Theoretical expl...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to gain more insight in the mechanism underlyi...
The efficacy of listening comprehension is presumably sustained over the life span, contradicting th...
International audienceThis fMRI study aimed to explore the effect of normal aging on word retrieval ...
International audiencePurpose : Age-related fMRI changes have not been extensively studied for langu...
Ageing leads to word-finding difficulties, reflected in age-related decreases in verbal fluency. Fur...
Across the lifespan, successful language comprehension is crucial for continued participation in eve...
Although widespread neural atrophy is an inevitable consequence of normal aging, not all cognitive a...
It is widely believed that language function tends to show little age-related performance decline. I...
The ability to perceive and produce speech undergoes important changes in late adulthood. The goal o...
Previous research has shown that adults process concrete words faster when they share a taxonomic (s...
It is unclear whether healthy aging influences concreteness effects (i.e., the processing advantage ...
It is unclear whether healthy aging influences concreteness effects (i.e., the processing advantage ...
Normal subjects and patients with aphasia exhibit a 'concreteness effect' during lexical tasks. Rece...
Background: Evidence for the brain mechanisms recruited when processing concrete versus abstract con...
Concrete words that are readily imagined are better remembered than abstract words. Theoretical expl...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to gain more insight in the mechanism underlyi...
The efficacy of listening comprehension is presumably sustained over the life span, contradicting th...
International audienceThis fMRI study aimed to explore the effect of normal aging on word retrieval ...
International audiencePurpose : Age-related fMRI changes have not been extensively studied for langu...
Ageing leads to word-finding difficulties, reflected in age-related decreases in verbal fluency. Fur...
Across the lifespan, successful language comprehension is crucial for continued participation in eve...
Although widespread neural atrophy is an inevitable consequence of normal aging, not all cognitive a...
It is widely believed that language function tends to show little age-related performance decline. I...
The ability to perceive and produce speech undergoes important changes in late adulthood. The goal o...
Previous research has shown that adults process concrete words faster when they share a taxonomic (s...