4.3 Article

Cognitive Ability Does Not Predict Objectively Measured Sedentary Behavior: Evidence From Three Older Cohorts

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 288-296

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/pag0000221

Keywords

sedentary behavior; cognitive ability; intelligence; activPAL; objective measures

Funding

  1. United Kingdom Medical Research Council (MRC) as part of the Lifelong Health and Wellbeing Initiative (LLHW) [MR/K025023/1]
  2. Disconnected Mind project (Age United Kingdom and MRC) [Mr/M01311/1, G1001245/96077]
  3. BBSRC [MR/K026992/1]
  4. MRC [MR/K026992/1]
  5. MRC
  6. MRC [MC_U147585827, MC_UP_A620_1017, MC_UU_12011/2, MC_UU_12011/4, G0400491, MR/K025023/1, MC_U147585819] Funding Source: UKRI

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Higher cognitive ability is associated with being more physically active. Much less is known about the associations between cognitive ability and sedentary behavior. Ours is the first study to examine whether historic and contemporaneous cognitive ability predicts objectively measured sedentary behavior in older age. Participants were drawn from 3 cohorts (Lothian Birth Cohort, 1936 [LBC1936] [n = 271]; and 2 West of Scotland Twenty-07 cohorts: 1950s [n = 310] and 1930s [n = 119]). Regression models were used to assess the associations between a range of cognitive tests measured at different points in the life course, with sedentary behavior in older age recorded over 7 days. Prior simple reaction time (RT) was significantly related to later sedentary time in the youngest, Twenty-07 1950s cohort (p = .04). The relationship was nonsignificant after controlling for long-standing illness or employment status, or after correcting for multiple comparisons in the initial model. None of the cognitive measures were related to sedentary behavior in either of the 2 older cohorts (LBC1936, Twenty-07 1930s). There was no association between any of the cognitive tests and the number of sit-to-stand transitions in any of the 3 cohorts. The meta-analytic estimates for the measures of simple and choice RT that were identical in all cohorts (n = 700) were also not significant. In conclusion, we found no evidence that objectively measured sedentary time in older adults is associated with measures of cognitive ability at different time points in life, including cognitive change from childhood to older age.

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