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Social Activity and Cognitive Functioning Over Time

Social activity is typically viewed as part of an engaged lifestyle that may help mitigate the deleterious effects of advanced age on cognitive function. As such, social activity has been examined in relation to cognitive abilities later in life. However, longitudinal evidence for this hypothesis th...

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Published in:Journal of aging research 2012
Main Authors: Brown, C.L, Gibbons, L.E, Kennison, R.F, Robitaille, A, Lindwall, Magnus, Mitchell, M.B, Shirk, S.D, Atri, A, Cimino, C.R, Benitez, A, MacDonald, S.W.S, Zelinski, E.M, Willis, S.L, Schaie, K.W, Johansson, Boo, Dixon, R.A, Mungas, D.M, Hofer, S.M, Piccinin, A.M
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container_title Journal of aging research
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creator Brown, C.L
Gibbons, L.E
Kennison, R.F
Robitaille, A
Lindwall, Magnus
Mitchell, M.B
Shirk, S.D
Atri, A
Cimino, C.R
Benitez, A
MacDonald, S.W.S
Zelinski, E.M
Willis, S.L
Schaie, K.W
Johansson, Boo
Dixon, R.A
Mungas, D.M
Hofer, S.M
Piccinin, A.M
description Social activity is typically viewed as part of an engaged lifestyle that may help mitigate the deleterious effects of advanced age on cognitive function. As such, social activity has been examined in relation to cognitive abilities later in life. However, longitudinal evidence for this hypothesis thus far remains inconclusive. The current study sought to clarify the relationship between social activity and cognitive function over time using a coordinated data analysis approach across four longitudinal studies. A series of multilevel growth models with social activity included as a covariate is presented. Four domains of cognitive function were assessed: reasoning, memory, fluency, and semantic knowledge. Results suggest that baseline social activity is related to some, but not all, cognitive functions. Baseline social activity levels failed to predict rate of decline in most cognitive abilities. Changes in social activity were not consistently associated with cognitive functioning. Our findings do not provide consistent evidence that changes in social activity correspond to immediate benefits in cognitive functioning, except perhaps for verbal fluency.
doi_str_mv 10.1155/2012/287438
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subjects Gerontologi, medicinsk/hälsovetenskaplig inriktning
Gerontology, specialising in Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology
Psykologi
title Social Activity and Cognitive Functioning Over Time
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