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. 2021 Apr;21(2):278-291.
doi: 10.3758/s13415-021-00868-y. Epub 2021 Mar 22.

Age differences in Neural Activation to Face Trustworthiness: Voxel Pattern and Activation Level Assessments

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Age differences in Neural Activation to Face Trustworthiness: Voxel Pattern and Activation Level Assessments

Yuchen Xie et al. Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2021 Apr.

Erratum in

Abstract

Judgment of trustworthiness is an important social ability. Many studies show neural activation differences to variations in face trustworthiness in brain reward regions. A previously published analysis of the present fMRI data showed that older adults' (OA) reward region activation responded significantly to trustworthiness in a set of older and younger faces, whereas younger adults' (YA) activation did not-a finding inconsistent with studies that used only younger faces. We hypothesized that voxel pattern analyses would be more sensitive to YA neural responses to trustworthiness in our set of faces, replicating YA neural discrimination in prior literature. Based on evidence for OA neural dedifferentiation, we also hypothesized that voxel pattern analyses would more accurately classify YA than OA neural responses to face trustworthiness. We reanalyzed the data with two pattern classification models and evaluated the models' performance with permutation testing. Voxel patterns discriminated face trustworthiness levels in both YA and OA reward regions, while allowing better classification of face trustworthiness for YA than OA, the reverse of previous results for neural activation levels. The moderation of age differences by analytic method shines a light on the possibility that voxel patterns uniquely index neural representations of the stimulus information content, consistent with findings of impaired representation with age.

Keywords: Aging; FFA; Face trustworthiness; Multi-voxel pattern analysis; Neural activation level analysis|; Reward.

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