New research using brains scans shows that
many elderly people have over time either learned to not stew over things they
regret or to not regret them at all.
Those
that don’t learn such skills tend to become depressed, say researchers from
University Medical Center in Germany, who have been conducting research into
regret and aging using brain scans. The team, led by Stefanie Brassen has
published the results of their efforts in the journal Science.
In
their report, the team finds that young people and depressed older adults tend
to rue decisions they’ve made and to fixate on them. In contrast, mentally healthy
older adults tend to call it all water under the bridge and move on.
To find
out such things, the team recruited sixty volunteers, 20 healthy young people,
20 mentally healthy elderly
people and 20 elderly people who suffer from depression, to help them
carry out an experiment.
They
asked each volunteer to play a video game of chance that involved several
covered containers. Under each was either a gold ingot or a demon that would
steal all the money they’d earned thus far. As each container was opened, the
player got to keep the gold if it was underneath.
As play
progressed the odds of finding a demon increased, upping the anxiety. Also, to
see what was going on in the brain,
players played the game while being scanned inside of an MRI machine.
The
researchers looked specifically at the brain region known as the ventral
striatum, which is known to respond to rewards. In analyzing the players, the
researchers found that young people and older depressed adults tended to show
more activity than did the brains of older more complacent older people.
By
watching carefully, they could also measure the impact on players when they
felt they opted out too early, or when they kept on playing but eventually lost
all they’d won to the demon.
This
time, the younger players and those that were older but depressed showed less
activity in the ventral striatum, indicating sadness or depression, meaning
they were upset about how things had come out.
The
older, healthier players on the other hand showed little to no change,
indicating they weren’t nearly as worried or upset about how things had played
out.
The
team also found by looking at the anterior cingulate cortex, that older healthy
adults did actually feel some remorse at some points in the game, but
suppressed it.
The
researchers repeated the whole exercise with another group of volunteers, only
instead of testing them with an MRI machine, they tested their heart rates and
skin for electrical response (indicating degree of sweating) during play.
This
time too they found that the older healthier players were more relaxed
regardless of outcome, while the young people and
older depressed people tended to sweat it out both while playing and then when
reacting to the results of their own decision making.
And
finally, to put it all together, the team interviewed the volunteers asking
them if they had a lot of regrets and how strong those feelings were if they
hand them. Not surprisingly, the volunteers answers tended to mirror the
results of the earlier experiments.
These
results, the researchers say, show that as people grow older, those that do so
in a healthy manner learn to not dwell on past mistakes or to suppress negative
feelings about them, while those that don’t tend to become depressed.
More information: Science DOI: 10.1126/science.1217516
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