4.5 Article

Measures of physical performance as mediators between personality and cognition in two prospective studies

Journal

ARCHIVES OF GERONTOLOGY AND GERIATRICS
Volume 107, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.archger.2022.104902

Keywords

Personality; Cognition; Gait speed; Peak expiratory flow; Grip strength

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This study aimed to investigate the pathways linking personality to cognition and found that measures of physical performance mediated the association between personality traits and cognitive measures. The study revealed that slower gait speed partially mediated the association between higher neuroticism, lower conscientiousness, and worse cognitive scores. Slower gait speed also partially mediated the association between openness and both objective and subjective memory. There was less consistent evidence for the mediating role of peak expiratory flow and grip strength. This study advances knowledge on the relationship between personality and cognition in older adults and supports the hypothesis that personality traits associated with better physical function can contribute to healthy cognitive aging.
Few studies have examined the pathways linking personality to cognition. This study aimed to examine whether measures of physical performance (gait speed, peak expiratory flow (PEF), and grip strength) mediated the as-sociation between five-factor model personality traits and cognition (memory performance, subjective memory, and informant-rated cognition). Participants were aged 57 to 95 years from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS, N = 4,109) and the English Longitudinal Study of ageing (ELSA, N = 3,584). In HRS, personality and demographic factors were assessed in 2008/2010, physical performance in 2012/2014, and memory perfor-mance and subjective memory in 2016/2018. Informant-rated cognition was obtained in 2016 for an HRS subsample. In ELSA, personality and demographic factors were assessed in 2010/2011, physical performance in 2012/2013, and objective and subjective memory in 2014/2015. Informant-rated cognition was obtained in 2018 for an ELSA subsample. With a few exceptions, replicable patterns of mediation were found across HRS and ELSA. Slower gait speed partially mediated the association between higher neuroticism, lower conscientiousness and worse scores on all three cognitive measures (memory performance, subjective memory, and informant-rated cognition). Slower gait also partially mediated the association between openness and both objective and sub-jective memory. There was less replicable evidence for a mediating role of PEF and grip strength. The present study advances knowledge on the pathways linking personality to cognition in older adults and supports the hypothesis that personality associations with better physical function can help support healthy cognitive aging.

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