Communications Biology (Jun 2024)

Cognitive reserve involves decision making and is associated with left parietal and hippocampal hypertrophy in neurodegeneration

  • Lorna Le Stanc,
  • Marine Lunven,
  • Maria Giavazzi,
  • Agnès Sliwinski,
  • Katia Youssov,
  • Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi,
  • Charlotte Jacquemot

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06416-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Cognitive reserve is the ability to actively cope with brain deterioration and delay cognitive decline in neurodegenerative diseases. It operates by optimizing performance through differential recruitment of brain networks or alternative cognitive strategies. We investigated cognitive reserve using Huntington’s disease (HD) as a genetic model of neurodegeneration to compare premanifest HD, manifest HD, and controls. Contrary to manifest HD, premanifest HD behave as controls despite neurodegeneration. By decomposing the cognitive processes underlying decision making, drift diffusion models revealed a response profile that differs progressively from controls to premanifest and manifest HD. Here, we show that cognitive reserve in premanifest HD is supported by an increased rate of evidence accumulation compensating for the abnormal increase in the amount of evidence needed to make a decision. This higher rate is associated with left superior parietal and hippocampal hypertrophy, and exhibits a bell shape over the course of disease progression, characteristic of compensation.