<http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-memory6feb06,0,2981681.story>

Why the Aging Mind Is Driven to Distraction

By Robert Lee Hotz
Times Staff Writer
February 6, 2006

NEW YORK — Exploring the anatomy of attention, researchers have
discovered that middle-aged people are more readily driven to
distraction by interruptions because of age-related changes in how
their brains work.

In research made public today, scientists at the University of Toronto
and the Rotman Research Institute documented for the first time how
age altered the brain's ability to ignore irrelevant intrusions.

"I have certainly found that as I have gotten older it is harder to
deal with distractions," said lead author Cheryl L. Grady, 52, who
studies the cognitive effects of aging. "This experiment tells me why
that is. This is happening in my brain."

By scanning the brains of healthy young, middle-aged and elderly
people, Grady and her colleagues detected a gradual breakdown in the
brain circuits that maintain the normal balance of the attention span.

Two key regions of the brain that allow the mind to focus on a single
task and tune out unwanted thoughts get out of kilter much earlier in
life than previously suspected.

Normally, special neural circuits in the prefrontal cortex become more
active when the mind pays strict attention.

At the same time, related brain areas in the medial frontal lobe —
thought to monitor more general background activity — simultaneously
slack off.

When the mind is at rest, the level of brain activity in those regions
is then supposed to reverse.

The researchers discovered, however, that starting at about age 40,
this seesaw pattern began to break down during memory tasks.

"It's known that older adults are more easily distracted. We think
we've found a mechanism in the brain to explain this," Grady said.
"The functional changes are detectable by middle age."

The study, funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, is
published in the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

As a practical matter, many researchers are trying to learn whether
multi-tasking techniques meant to improve communication and
productivity could instead make people scatterbrained, leaving them
lethargic and forgetful.

By one published estimate, the typical office worker is interrupted
every three minutes.

Scientists from King's College at the University of London, for
example, recently determined that people trying to juggle phone calls,
e-mail and other routine office distractions suffered a greater loss
of IQ than someone smoking marijuana.

Grady, however, suggested that people in their 20s today — their
brains molded by instant messaging and all of the other
high-technology of the short attention span — may be better able to
manage unwarranted interruptions when they reach old age.

"If you are a 20-year-old today," Grady said, "you may find it easier
to deal with distraction when you are 60 because you have had so much
practice."

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