This article reports original data from the baseline measurement occasion of a longitudinal study of healthy, community-dwelling older adults from the Victoria, British Columbia region. Participants were diagnosed as normal, subtle decline, or mild cognitive impairment according to actuarial neuropsychological criteria (adjusted for age only or adjusted for age and premorbid IQ). Diagnostic classification was employed to illustrate group differences in a novel metric of multi-timescale neural adaptability derived from 4-min of resting-state electroencephalographic data collected from each participant (immediately following their neuropsychological evaluation).
Prior findings were replicated; adjusting raw neuropsychological test scores for individual differences in estimated premorbid IQ appeared to increase the sensitivity of standardized clinical tasks to subtle cognitive impairment. Moreover, and consistent with prior neuroscientific research, timescale-specific (i.e. at ∼12-20 ms timescales) differences in resting-state neural adaptability appeared to characterize groups who differed in terms of neuropsycholgoical diagnostic classification.
Recently proposed actuarial neuropsychological criteria for subtle cognitive decline identify older adults who show timescale-specific changes in resting brain function that may signal the onset of preclinical dementia. The subtle decline stage may represent a critical inflection point-partial loss of neurocognitive adaptability-on a pathological aging trajectory. These findings illustrate areas of potential future development in neurocognitive health care.