There is evidence that frontal lobe function may
diminish in normal aging. The P3 component of the event-related
brain potential (ERP) elicited by target events in an oddball
paradigm becomes more frontally oriented in elderly subjects.
It was hypothesized that the extent to which the P3 distribution
is frontally oriented in old subjects may index less efficient
frontal lobe function. In this study, bootstrapping methods
were used to establish the reliability of the locations
of maxima of surface brain activity obtained with ERP recordings
from young and old subjects. The results indicated that
brain activity maxima are reliable for a given individual.
However, among the elderly only, there were also clear
individual differences in the distribution of the P3 component
elicited by target stimuli in an oddball paradigm. On the
basis of these differences, the old subjects were divided
into two groups. In line with predictions, those elderly
subjects who showed frontal-maximal P3 scalp distributions
had lower performance on standardized neuropsychological
tests of frontal lobe function than those elderly subjects
who showed posterior-maximal scalp topographies.