Journal
NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING
Volume 29, Issue 10, Pages 1556-1562Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2007.03.016
Keywords
rhesus monkeys; aging; motor decline; motor memory
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Funding
- USPHS [AG13494]
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We Studied long-term motor memory preservation in rhesus monkeys tested oil a task similar to that employed in humans. First, motor speed and rate of motor decline was measured in 23 animals ranging from 4 to 26 years old. The task for the animals consisted of removing a food reward from a curved rod within the inner chamber of an automated panel. Young animals performed twice as fast as the aged animals. Second. young (n = 6) and aged (n = 10) animals were re-lested I year later oil the same task with no intervening practice. We anticipated a decline in motor speed of 144 ms/year., instead the average performance time recorded during the repeat session improved significantly by 17% in the aged animals. This finding mirrors that of a longitudinal Study conducted in humans using a similar test panel and supports that, while initial performance times of a novel motor task decline with age, motor memory traces are preserved over ail extended time interval, even Without Continued practice. The data also Support that the rhesus Monkey could be used as a model to study the mechanisms by which long-term retention of motor memory Occurs in aging (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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