Effect of Scrabble© Expertise on Brain Ageing as Measured with Brain Signal Variability and Event-Related Potentials

Date
2016
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Abstract
We examined the effect of Scrabble expertise on brain ageing using brain signal variability as measured with multiscale entropy (MSE) and brain signal mean as measured with event-related potentials (ERP). We collected ERP data while age-matched Scrabble experts and controls (age range: 24 to 83) performed an expertise-related task (lexical decision task; LDT) and a non-expertise-related task (symbol decision task; SDT). During both tasks, fine-scale MSE increased with age for both groups, suggesting that short-range neural communication increases with age. Midscale MSE increased with age for experts but decreased for controls, suggesting that longer-range neural communication is maintained through older age for experts but not for controls. In addition, experts did not show the typical age-related decrease in frontal P300 amplitude. However, all age-related effects, regardless of direction, were associated with worse performance in both groups. This study provides a better understanding of how expertise affects brain ageing.
Description
Keywords
Psychology, Psychology--Cognitive, Psychology--Experimental
Citation
Wang, H. (2016). Effect of Scrabble© Expertise on Brain Ageing as Measured with Brain Signal Variability and Event-Related Potentials (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/25808