Associations between proper name retrieval, associative memory, and regional tau accumulation in a normal aging cohort
Isha Sai, Alexandra N. Trelle, Jintao Sheng, Christina B. Young, Kyan Younes, Jennifer Park, Lucah Medina Guerra, America Romero, Hillary Vossler, Anthony D. Wagner, Elizabeth C. Mormino

TL;DR
This study explores how tau accumulation in the brain relates to memory and name retrieval in older adults.
Contribution
The study links regional tau accumulation to proper name retrieval and associative memory in normal aging.
Findings
Higher tau levels in ERC and VTC were associated with worse proper name recall.
Proper name retrieval was positively linked to associative memory performance.
Face stimuli showed stronger associations between tau and memory outcomes.
Abstract
Decline in episodic memory and proper name retrieval are common in aging and may be linked to early Alzheimer's pathology in medial and ventral temporal cortex. We investigated associations between regional tau PET, associative memory, and proper name retrieval in a normal aging cohort. Participants were 59 cognitively unimpaired older adults (mean age = 75.97 ± 6.04 years, 61% female) from the Stanford Aging and Memory Study (SAMS). Participants completed a word‐picture (famous face or place) associative memory task concurrent with fMRI and a post‐scan cued‐recall test for word‐image associations. Proper name recall for face and place stimuli from the memory test was assessed on a separate visit 3.6 ± 3.82 months following the associative memory paradigm. Regional Tau accumulation was measured using 18F‐PI2620 PET, and standardized uptake value ratios (SUVRs) were extracted from the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Memory and Neural Mechanisms · Memory Processes and Influences
