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Age-related fornix decline predicts conservative response strategy-based slowing in perceptual decision-making.

Aging leads to response slowing but the underpinning cognitive and neural mechanisms remain elusive. We modelled older and younger adults' response times (RT) from a flanker task with a diffusion drift model (DDM) and employed diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy to study neurobiological predictors of DDM components (drift-rate, boundary separation, non-decision time). Microstructural indices were derived from white matter pathways involved in visuo-perceptual and attention processing [optic radiation, inferior and superior longitudinal fasciculi (ILF, SLF), fornix]. Estimates of metabolite concentrations [N-acetyl aspartate (NAA), glutamate (Glx), and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), creatine (Cr), choline (Cho), myoinositol (mI)] were measured from occipital (OCC), anterior cingulate (ACC) and posterior parietal cortices (PPC). Age-related increases in RT, boundary separation, and non-decision time were observed with response conservatism acounting for RT slowing. Aging was associated with reductions in white matter microstructure (lower fractional anisotropy and restricted signal fraction, larger diffusivities) and in metabolites (NAA in ACC and PPC, Glx in ACC). Regression analyses identified brain regions involved in top-down (fornix, SLF, ACC, PPC) and bottom-up (ILF, optic radiation OCC) processing as predictors for DDM parameters and RT. Fornix FA was the strongest predictor for increases in boundary separation (beta = -0.8) and mediated the effects of age on RT. These findings demonstrate that response slowing in visual discrimination is driven by the adoption of a more conservative response strategy. Age-related fornix decline may result in noisier communication of contextual information from the hippocampus to anterior decision-making regions and thus contribute to the conservative response strategy shift.

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