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Spatial navigation training protects the hippocampus against age-related changes during early and late adulthood

Author

  • Martin Lövdén
  • Sabine Schaefer
  • Hannes Noack
  • Nils Christian Bodammer
  • Simone Kühn
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze
  • Emrah Düzel
  • Lars Bäckman
  • Ulman Lindenberger

Summary, in English

It is unknown whether lifestyle, including mental stimulation, and appropriate training interventions, may directly improve spatial navigation performance and its underlying neural substrates. Here we report that healthy younger and older men performing a cognitively demanding spatial navigation task every other day over 4 months display navigation-related gains in performance and stable hippocampal volumes that were maintained 4 months after termination of training. In contrast, control groups displayed volume decrements consistent with longitudinal estimates of age-related decline. Hippocampal barrier density, as indicated by mean diffusivity estimated from diffusion tensor imaging, showed a quadratic shape of increased density after training followed by a return to baseline in the right hippocampus, but declined in the control groups and in the left hippocampus. We conclude that sustained experiential demands on spatial ability protect hippocampal integrity against age-related decline. These results provide the first longitudinal evidence indicating that spatial navigation experience modifies hippocampal volumes in humans, and confirm epidemiological results suggesting that mental stimulation may have direct effects on neural integrity.

Publishing year

2012

Language

English

Publication/Series

Neurobiology of Aging

Volume

33

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Psychology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1558-1497