Syntactic Processing in the Aging Brain: Neural Reorganization, Cognitive Scaffolding, and Implications for Language Resilience

衰老大脑中的句法加工:神经重组、认知支架及其对语言韧性的影响

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Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Although behavioral studies suggest that syntactic comprehension is relatively preserved in healthy aging, the underlying neural mechanisms remain a subject of intense debate. This review aims to synthesize neuroimaging and electrophysiological evidence to clarify how the aging brain reorganizes to maintain language resilience. METHODS: A systematic search was conducted across multiple databases such as PubMed and Web of Science. Twenty-three relevant empirical studies meeting our inclusion criteria were identified. The synthesis focused on regional activation patterns, functional connectivity, and temporal dynamics during syntactic processing in older adults compared to younger controls. RESULTS: The review revealed four key findings. First, the core left-lateralized frontotemporal language network remains resilient during syntactic processing in older adults. Second, age-related changes in functional connectivity within the core network are heterogeneous, with evidence for both reduction and preservation. Third, right-hemisphere homologues are increasingly recruited, but its functional significance is condition-dependent, serving both compensatory and non-compensatory roles. Fourth, older adults increasingly engage domain-general cognitive control regions, such as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and pre-supplementary motor area, to support syntactic processing under high cognitive loads. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of these findings, we propose the Graded Compensation and Cognitive Scaffolding (GCCS) model which posits that language resilience is maintained through a graded and condition-dependent adaptation of neural resources. This study critically evaluates the current literature and highlights the need for more methodologically rigorous studies to better understand the effects of aging on syntactic processing and its neural basis. Given the limited number of eligible studies, the findings of this review should be interpreted with caution. More well-powered, longitudinal research is needed to uncover the trajectory of neural reorganization during syntactic processing in older adults.

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