Cognitive Reserve in the Healthy Elderly: Cognitive and Psychological Factors

Cognitive reserve (CR) helps explain the mismatch between expected cognitive decline and observed maintenance of cognitive functioning in older age. Factors such as education, literacy, lifestyle, and social networking are usually considered to be proxies of CR and its variability between individual...

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Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ScienceOpen 2014-08-01
Series:ScienceOpen Research
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=434857a0-3ab8-40a5-878b-45e07be76f5a
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spelling doaj-0dfa92839d6c4fd2842df9556aa557632020-12-15T17:21:21ZengScienceOpenScienceOpen Research2199-10062014-08-0110.14293/S2199-1006.1.SOR-SOCSCI.ADKHNX.v1Cognitive Reserve in the Healthy Elderly: Cognitive and Psychological FactorsCognitive reserve (CR) helps explain the mismatch between expected cognitive decline and observed maintenance of cognitive functioning in older age. Factors such as education, literacy, lifestyle, and social networking are usually considered to be proxies of CR and its variability between individuals. A more direct approach to examine CR is through the assessment of capacity to gain from practice in a standardized challenging cognitive task that demands activation of cognitive resources. In this study, we applied a testing-the-limits paradigm to a group of 136 healthy elderly subjects (60-75 years) and additionally examined the possible contribution of complex mental activities and quality of sleep to cognitive performance gain. We found a significant, but variable gain and identified verbal memory, cognitive flexibility and problem solving as significant factors. This outcome is in line with our earlier study on CR in healthy mental aging (Zihl et al., 2014). Interestingly and contrary to expectations, our analysis revealed that complex mental activities and sleep quality do not significantly influence CR. Contrasting “high” and ”low” cognitive performers revealed significant differences in verbal memory and cognitive flexibility; again, complex mental activities and sleep quality did not contribute to this measure of CR. In conclusion, the results of this study support and extend previous findings on CR in older age; further they underline the need for improvements in existing protocols for assessing CR in a dynamic manner.https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=434857a0-3ab8-40a5-878b-45e07be76f5a
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
title Cognitive Reserve in the Healthy Elderly: Cognitive and Psychological Factors
spellingShingle Cognitive Reserve in the Healthy Elderly: Cognitive and Psychological Factors
ScienceOpen Research
title_short Cognitive Reserve in the Healthy Elderly: Cognitive and Psychological Factors
title_full Cognitive Reserve in the Healthy Elderly: Cognitive and Psychological Factors
title_fullStr Cognitive Reserve in the Healthy Elderly: Cognitive and Psychological Factors
title_full_unstemmed Cognitive Reserve in the Healthy Elderly: Cognitive and Psychological Factors
title_sort cognitive reserve in the healthy elderly: cognitive and psychological factors
publisher ScienceOpen
series ScienceOpen Research
issn 2199-1006
publishDate 2014-08-01
description Cognitive reserve (CR) helps explain the mismatch between expected cognitive decline and observed maintenance of cognitive functioning in older age. Factors such as education, literacy, lifestyle, and social networking are usually considered to be proxies of CR and its variability between individuals. A more direct approach to examine CR is through the assessment of capacity to gain from practice in a standardized challenging cognitive task that demands activation of cognitive resources. In this study, we applied a testing-the-limits paradigm to a group of 136 healthy elderly subjects (60-75 years) and additionally examined the possible contribution of complex mental activities and quality of sleep to cognitive performance gain. We found a significant, but variable gain and identified verbal memory, cognitive flexibility and problem solving as significant factors. This outcome is in line with our earlier study on CR in healthy mental aging (Zihl et al., 2014). Interestingly and contrary to expectations, our analysis revealed that complex mental activities and sleep quality do not significantly influence CR. Contrasting “high” and ”low” cognitive performers revealed significant differences in verbal memory and cognitive flexibility; again, complex mental activities and sleep quality did not contribute to this measure of CR. In conclusion, the results of this study support and extend previous findings on CR in older age; further they underline the need for improvements in existing protocols for assessing CR in a dynamic manner.
url https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=434857a0-3ab8-40a5-878b-45e07be76f5a
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