4.5 Article

Subjective age and multiple cognitive domains in two longitudinal samples

期刊

JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH
卷 150, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2021.110616

关键词

Subjective age; Cognition; Adulthood; Memory; Executive function; Verbal fluency; Visuospatial ability; Numeric reasoning

资金

  1. MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Successful Midlife Development
  2. National Institute on Aging [NIAU01AG009740, P01-AG020166, U19-AG051426]
  3. General Clinical Research Centers Program [M01-RR023942, M01-RR00865]
  4. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR000427]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study found a prospective relationship between subjective age and performance in different cognitive domains among older adults. Older subjective age was consistently associated with worse performance in episodic memory and speed-attention-executive functions, with this association replicable and robust over up to 20 years of follow-up.
Objective: Subjective age is consistently related to memory performance and global cognitive function among older adults. The present study examines whether subjective age is prospectively related to specific domains of cognitive function. Method: Participants were drawn from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS, N = 2549, Mean Age = 69.66, SD = 7.36) and the Midlife in the United States Survey (MIDUS, N = 2499, Mean Age = 46.24, SD = 11.25). In both samples, subjective age, depressive symptoms, chronic conditions, and demographic factors were assessed at baseline. Four domains of cognition were assessed 8 years later in the HRS and almost 20 years later in the MIDUS: episodic memory, speed-attention-executive, verbal fluency, and numeric reasoning. HRS also assessed visuospatial ability. Results: Regression analysis revealed that an older subjective age was related to worse performance in the domains of episodic memory and speed-attention-executive in both samples. The effect size for the difference between a younger and an older subjective age was d = 0.14 (MIDUS) and d = 0.24 (HRS) for episodic memory and d = 0.25 (MIDUS) and d = 0.33 (HRS) for speed-attention-executive. Feeling older was related to lower verbal fluency in HRS (d = 0.30) but not in MIDUS, whereas no association was found with numeric reasoning in either sample. An older subjective age was related to lower visuospatial ability in HRS (d = 0.25). Conclusion: Subjective age is prospectively related to performance in different cognitive domains. The associations between subjective age and both episodic memory and speed-attention-executive functions were replicable and robust over up to 20 years of follow-up.

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