Aging, cognition, and culture: a neuroscientific perspective

Behavioral studies have suggested some intriguing differences across cultures in cognitive processes such as attention to context, the use of categorization, stereotypes about aging, and metamemory judgments. Moreover, there is behavioral evidence to suggest that, with age, cultural differences in cognition become less pronounced, likely due to decreased cognitive resources that may result in more similarity across cultures in cognition. The study of the neuroscience of aging, culture and cognition, although in its infancy, potentially provides insight into the contributions of experience and neurobiology to cognitive function. We review initial findings of cross-cultural behavioral aging research in light of cognitive neuroscience of aging research and consider the methodological challenges and benefits of adding a cross-cultural dimension to the study of the cognitive neuroscience of aging.

[1]  M. Rugg,et al.  Context Effects on the Neural Correlates of Recognition Memory An Electrophysiological Study , 2001, Neuron.

[2]  M. Farah,et al.  Neural Specialization for Letter Recognition , 2002, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[3]  R. Nisbett,et al.  Culture and systems of thought: holistic versus analytic cognition. , 2001, Psychological review.

[4]  J. G. Snodgrass,et al.  A standardized set of 260 pictures: norms for name agreement, image agreement, familiarity, and visual complexity. , 1980, Journal of experimental psychology. Human learning and memory.

[5]  Pamela K. Smith,et al.  Models of visuospatial and verbal memory across the adult life span. , 2002, Psychology and aging.

[6]  N. Volkow,et al.  Association between decline in brain dopamine activity with age and cognitive and motor impairment in healthy individuals. , 1998, The American journal of psychiatry.

[7]  Paul DiMaggio Culture and cognition , 1997 .

[8]  G. Winocur,et al.  Cross-cultural differences in memory: the role of culture-based stereotypes about aging. , 2000, Psychology and aging.

[9]  J. Morris,et al.  Functional Brain Imaging of Young, Nondemented, and Demented Older Adults , 2000, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[10]  H Cheung,et al.  Recall and articulation of English and Chinese words by Chinese-English bilinguals , 1993, Memory & cognition.

[11]  J. P. Rushton,et al.  Brain size and cognitive ability: Correlations with age, sex, social class, and race , 1996, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[12]  Trey Hedden,et al.  Category norms as a function of culture and age: comparisons of item responses to 105 categories by american and chinese adults. , 2004, Psychology and aging.

[13]  D. Cohen,et al.  As Seen by the Other … : Perspectives on the Self in the Memories and Emotional Perceptions of Easterners and Westerners , 2002, Psychological science.

[14]  C. Chiu,et al.  Multicultural minds. A dynamic constructivist approach to culture and cognition. , 2000, The American psychologist.

[15]  M. J. Farah,et al.  Late experience alters vision , 1995, Nature.

[16]  D. Geary,et al.  Are East Asian versus American differences in arithmetical ability a recent phenomenon , 1996 .

[17]  J. P. Rushton,et al.  Size matters: a review and new analyses of racial differences in cranial capacity and intelligence that refute Kamin and Omari , 2000 .

[18]  R. Nisbett,et al.  Aging, culture, and cognition. , 1999, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[19]  W. A. Bousfield,et al.  Associative Clustering in the Recall of Words of Different Taxonomic Frequencies of Occurrence , 1958 .

[20]  R. Nisbett,et al.  PERSONALITY PROCESSES AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES Attending Holistically Versus Analytically: Comparing the Context Sensitivity of Japanese and Americans , 2004 .

[21]  R. Cabeza Hemispheric asymmetry reduction in older adults: the HAROLD model. , 2002, Psychology and aging.

[22]  J. Logan,et al.  Under-Recruitment and Nonselective Recruitment Dissociable Neural Mechanisms Associated with Aging , 2002, Neuron.

[23]  R. Nisbett,et al.  Culture, dialectics, and reasoning about contradiction. , 1999 .

[24]  Denise C. Park,et al.  Cognitive Aging: A Primer , 1999 .

[25]  K. Schaie,et al.  Environmental factors as a conceptual framework for examining cognitive performance in Chinese adults , 2001 .

[26]  Matthew D. Lieberman,et al.  The emergence of social cognitive neuroscience. , 2001, The American psychologist.

[27]  Edward E. Smith,et al.  Age Differences in the Frontal Lateralization of Verbal and Spatial Working Memory Revealed by PET , 2000, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[28]  M. D’Esposito,et al.  The Effect of Normal Aging on the Coupling of Neural Activity to the Bold Hemodynamic Response , 1999, NeuroImage.

[29]  R. Nisbett,et al.  Cultural variation in verbal versus spatial neuropsychological function across the life span. , 2002, Neuropsychology.

[30]  B. Anderton,et al.  The Ageing Brain , 2003 .

[31]  J. Cutler,et al.  Trends and disparities in coronary heart disease, stroke, and other cardiovascular diseases in the United States: findings of the national conference on cardiovascular disease prevention. , 2000, Circulation.

[32]  Shu-Chen Li,et al.  Biocultural orchestration of developmental plasticity across levels: the interplay of biology and culture in shaping the mind and behavior across the life span. , 2003, Psychological bulletin.

[33]  Denise C. Park,et al.  The basic mechanisms accounting for age-related decline in cognitive function. , 2000 .

[34]  Richard S. J. Frackowiak,et al.  Navigation-related structural change in the hippocampi of taxi drivers. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[35]  Anthony R. McIntosh,et al.  Age-Related Differences in Neural Activity during Memory Encoding and Retrieval: A Positron Emission Tomography Study , 1997, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[36]  Denise C. Park,et al.  Cognitive aging and everyday life. , 2000 .

[37]  L. Carstensen,et al.  Autonomic, subjective, and expressive responses to emotional films in older and younger Chinese Americans and European Americans. , 2000, Psychology and aging.

[38]  R. Dixon,et al.  Age-related cognitive deficits mediated by changes in the striatal dopamine system. , 2000, The American journal of psychiatry.

[39]  G. Winocur,et al.  In Search of the Self: A Positron Emission Tomography Study , 1999 .

[40]  R. Nisbett The Geography of Thought , 2003 .

[41]  E. Langer,et al.  Aging free from negative stereotypes: successful memory in China and among the American deaf. , 1994, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[42]  R. Nisbett,et al.  Culture, control, and perception of relationships in the environment. , 2000, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[43]  Stephan F. Taylor,et al.  Cerebral aging: integration of brain and behavioral models of cognitive function , 2001, Dialogues in clinical neuroscience.