Reduced Efficiency in the Attentional Network During Distractor Suppression in Mild Cognitive Impairment
Jatupong Oboun, Piyanon Charoenpoonpanich, Anna Raksapatcharawong, Chaipat Chunharas, Itthi Chatnuntawech, Chainarong Amornbunchornvej, Sirawaj Itthipuripat

TL;DR
This study explores neural and behavioral differences in distractor suppression between MCI patients and healthy controls, revealing reduced neural efficiency in MCI that could serve as early markers of cognitive decline.
Contribution
It introduces the use of alpha band coherence and global efficiency as early neural markers for detecting mild cognitive impairment during attention tasks.
Findings
Healthy controls show higher neural efficiency and faster responses in congruent conditions.
MCI patients exhibit reduced neural adaptability and efficiency during distractor suppression.
Alpha band coherence and global efficiency can differentiate MCI from healthy aging.
Abstract
Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) is a critical transitional stage between normal cognitive aging and dementia, making its early detection essential. This study investigates the neural mechanisms of distractor suppression in MCI patients using EEG and behavioral data during an attention-cueing Eriksen flanker task. A cohort of 56 MCIs and 26 healthy controls (HCs) performed tasks with congruent and incongruent stimuli of varying saliency levels. During these tasks, EEG data were analyzed for alpha band coherence's functional connectivity, focusing on Global Efficiency (GE), while Reaction Time (RT) and Hit Rate (HR) were also collected. Our findings reveal significant interactions between congruency, saliency, and cognitive status on GE, RT, and HR. In HCs, congruent conditions resulted in higher GE (p = 0.0114, multivariate t-distribution correction, MVT), faster RTs (p < 0.0001, MVT),…
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