Higher cognitive reserve is associated with better working memory performance and working-memory-related p300 modulation
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24119Date
2021-03-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Gutiérrez-Zamora Velasco, Gabriela; Fernández, Thalía; Silva-Pereyra, Juan; Reynoso-Alcántara, Vicenta; Castro Chavira, Susana AngelicaAbstract
This study aims to examine how two levels of cognitive reserve, as evidenced by reading
syntactic skill, modify performance and neural activity in a two-load-level (high vs. low) working
memory (WM) task. Two groups of participants with different reading skills, high and low, were
obtained from clustering analysis. We collected the P300 event-related potential component during
the performance of the WM Sternberg task. The high reading performance (HRP) group showed a
higher percentage of correct answers than the low reading performance (LRP) group in the negative probes of the WM task, which were probe stimuli not included in the memory set presented
immediately before. Both groups showed P300 amplitude modulations, that is, larger WM-related
P300 amplitudes for low than for high WM loads. Following the behavioral results, the HRP group
displayed smaller WM-related amplitude modulations than the LRP group in the negative probes.
The findings together suggest that higher levels of reading skill are associated with improved neural
efficiency, which reflects in a better working memory performance.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Gutiérrez-Zamora Velasco, Fernández, Silva-Pereyra, Reynoso-Alcántara, Castro Chavira. Higher cognitive reserve is associated with better working memory performance and working-memory-related p300 modulation. Brain Sciences. 2021;11(3):1-10Metadata
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