# Understanding the neural mechanisms underlying the benefits of unitization on associative memory in young and older adults

> **NIH NIH R56** · PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY, THE · 2021 · $508,243

## Abstract

Abstract. By 2050, roughly 83.7 million individuals in the U.S. alone will be over the age of 65. Within this
population, memory declines are at the forefront of age-related cognitive complaints. Associative memory, or the
ability to link together multiple pieces of information, is especially vulnerable to aging. Associative memory is
central to everyday memory function, supporting everything from our ability to remember face-name associations
to links between medicines and their daily dosages. As such, there is an urgent need to identify methods that
can improve associative memory in older adults. Our long-term goal is to identify effective, theory-driven,
evidence-based approaches for enhancing associative memory in older adults. The objective of this application
is to elucidate the mechanism underlying the cognitive and neural benefits of unitization on associative memory.
The overarching hypothesis is that unitization operates by creating representations of object pairs that mirror
how single items are encoded in memory, and does not require conscious, strategic implementation [nor is it
dependent on semantic relatedness]. Instead we posit that unitization can be effectively induced through the
way in which information is presented to a person. We expect that unitization will result in shifts from
hippocampal-based associative processing to cortical-based item processing, with similar shifts observed
throughout the memory network, whereby patterns of unitization-related activity are more similar to item-level
processing than to associative processing. Additionally, if unitization operates by forming an integrated
representation of item pairs, then the unitized ensemble should be both encoded and subsequently retrieved as
a single ensemble, with retrieval processes mirroring that of item retrieval. This hypothesis is based on a) findings
that unitized information is processed by item-processing regions in young adults and b) the ability of Gestalt
principles to transform the representations of individual items into a holistic representation. Finally, we posit that
unitization is not limited to binding amongst co-occurring statically presented items, but can occur across
temporally presented visual and auditory information as well. The approach is innovative because it directly
applies a well-established theory of perception to ameliorate the burden of binding in associative memory
processing, with the goal of enhancing associative memory in aging. The approach employs cutting-edge
multivariate and network connectivity analyses to test the neurocognitive mechanism underlying the application
of unitization to associative memory at all stages of memory. The proposed research is significant because it
tests a method for enhancing memory in aging that can be employed across a range of applications absent of
subject-generated strategy deployment. In doing so, the work is a critical step in elucidating the flexibility of
neural processing across the ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10474827
- **Project number:** 1R56AG070014-01A1
- **Recipient organization:** PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY, THE
- **Principal Investigator:** nancy anne dennis
- **Activity code:** R56 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $508,243
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2021-09-30 → 2024-08-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10474827

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10474827, Understanding the neural mechanisms underlying the benefits of unitization on associative memory in young and older adults (1R56AG070014-01A1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-25 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10474827. Licensed CC0.

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