Healthy cognitive aging involves selective changes, with relative preservation of some domains and decline in others, particularly attention, inhibitory control, and executive function. Somatosensory gating (SG) refers to the brain's ability to suppress neural responses to redundant tactile input, conserving resources for relevant stimuli and reflects pre-attentive and inhibitory mechanisms. Prior region-of-interest studies have shown age-related reductions in gamma SG within contralateral primary somatosensory cortex (S1), and modulation of theta, alpha, and beta SG by attention in young adults. However, whole-brain, multispectral age effects remain unclear. In this study, 63 middle-to-older aged adults (38 females; mean age = 59.9 {+/-} 8.6 years) underwent magnetoencephalography during a paired-pulse somatosensory paradigm. SG was quantified as attenuation of the neural response to the second stimulus relative to the first. Time-frequency analyses identified theta (4-7 Hz), alpha (8-13 Hz), beta (15-25 Hz), and gamma (30-90 Hz) oscillatory responses, and band-specific voxel-wise whole-brain gating maps assessed age-related effects. Attention/executive function was also measured. Results showed significant age-related increases in gamma SG in the contralateral supplementary motor area. Mediation analyses suggested this increase partially offsets age-related declines in attention/executive function, consistent with a partial compensatory mechanism. Additionally, theta SG in contralateral S1 increased with age. These findings demonstrate frequency- and region-specific age-related alterations in SG, suggesting that older adults may recruit enhanced inhibitory mechanisms, particularly in higher-order sensorimotor regions, to support cognitive function.
Virlley, M., Xi, Y., Bell, N. M., Pruitt, T., Guo, L., White, S., Yu, F. F., Lacritz, L. H., Rossetti, H., Cullum, C. M., Shah, A. M., Davenport, E. M., Maldjian, J. A., Proskovec, A. L.
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