1. Larger Temporal Lobe on Volumetric Brain Analysis and Reduced Verbal Memory in Cognitively Healthy Older Individuals
- Author
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Rising, Shant and Rising, Shant
- Abstract
Doctor of Philosophy in Clinical Psychology (PhD), The purpose of this study is to further understand the relationship between temporal lobe volume and verbal memory in cognitively healthy individuals. It was hypothesized that temporal lobe volume (from NeuroQuant) would negatively associate with performance on the California Verbal Learning Test-Second Edition Short Delay Free Recall (SDFR), and isolated left temporal volume association would be more pronounced. Data from 56 cognitively healthy participants (21 males, 35 females) were utilized. The average participant age was 71.1 years (SD = 7.96) and they had a mean of 17.1 years of education (SD = 2.61). Hierarchical multiple regressions were conducted to explore the relationship between of SDFR and temporal lobe volume. Sex, education, age, and verbal IQ (VIQ) accounted for significant variance in both outcomes, but amyloid burden did not significantly contribute to the models. Total temporal lobe volume percentage relative to intracranial volume (TTempICV), total temporal lobe normed percentile (TTempNorm), isolated left temporal lobe volume relative to intracranial volume (LTempICV), and left temporal lobe normed percentile (LTempNorm) tended to associate with decreases in SDFR such that larger temporal lobe volume was associated with fewer words recalled. Findings supported compensatory mechanisms potentially involving neuroinflammation, gliosis, and amyloid burden during early neurodegeneration.
- Published
- 2024