Literature DB >> 32772803

Education and Cognitive Functioning Across the Life Span.

Martin Lövdén1,2, Laura Fratiglioni1,3, M Maria Glymour4, Ulman Lindenberger5,6, Elliot M Tucker-Drob7.   

Abstract

Cognitive abilities are important predictors of educational and occupational performance, socioeconomic attainment, health, and longevity. Declines in cognitive abilities are linked to impairments in older adults' everyday functions, but people differ from one another in their rates of cognitive decline over the course of adulthood and old age. Hence, identifying factors that protect against compromised late-life cognition is of great societal interest. The number of years of formal education completed by individuals is positively correlated with their cognitive function throughout adulthood and predicts lower risk of dementia late in life. These observations have led to the propositions that prolonging education might (a) affect cognitive ability and (b) attenuate aging-associated declines in cognition. We evaluate these propositions by reviewing the literature on educational attainment and cognitive aging, including recent analyses of data harmonized across multiple longitudinal cohort studies and related meta-analyses. In line with the first proposition, the evidence indicates that educational attainment has positive effects on cognitive function. We also find evidence that cognitive abilities are associated with selection into longer durations of education and that there are common factors (e.g., parental socioeconomic resources) that affect both educational attainment and cognitive development. There is likely reciprocal interplay among these factors, and among cognitive abilities, during development. Education-cognitive ability associations are apparent across the entire adult life span and across the full range of education levels, including (to some degree) tertiary education. However, contrary to the second proposition, we find that associations between education and aging-associated cognitive declines are negligible and that a threshold model of dementia can account for the association between educational attainment and late-life dementia risk. We conclude that educational attainment exerts its influences on late-life cognitive function primarily by contributing to individual differences in cognitive skills that emerge in early adulthood but persist into older age. We also note that the widespread absence of educational influences on rates of cognitive decline puts constraints on theoretical notions of cognitive aging, such as the concepts of cognitive reserve and brain maintenance. Improving the conditions that shape development during the first decades of life carries great potential for improving cognitive ability in early adulthood and for reducing public-health burdens related to cognitive aging and dementia.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cognitive ability; cognitive aging; dementia; educational attainment; life-span development

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32772803      PMCID: PMC7425377          DOI: 10.1177/1529100620920576

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci Public Interest        ISSN: 1529-1006


  193 in total

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Review 10.  NIA-AA Research Framework: Toward a biological definition of Alzheimer's disease.

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  71 in total

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Authors:  Timothy P Morris; Meishan Ai; Laura Chaddock-Heyman; Edward McAuley; Charles H Hillman; Arthur F Kramer
Journal:  J Cogn Enhanc       Date:  2021-03-17

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Authors:  Emily A Greenfield; Addam Reynolds; Sara M Moorman
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3.  Paradoxical cognitive trajectories in men from earlier to later adulthood.

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Journal:  Neurobiol Aging       Date:  2021-10-14       Impact factor: 4.673

4.  Education and Income Show Heterogeneous Relationships to Lifespan Brain and Cognitive Differences Across European and US Cohorts.

Authors:  Kristine B Walhovd; Anders M Fjell; Yunpeng Wang; Inge K Amlien; Athanasia M Mowinckel; Ulman Lindenberger; Sandra Düzel; David Bartrés-Faz; Klaus P Ebmeier; Christian A Drevon; William F C Baaré; Paolo Ghisletta; Louise Baruël Johansen; Rogier A Kievit; Richard N Henson; Kathrine Skak Madsen; Lars Nyberg; Jennifer R Harris; Cristina Solé-Padullés; Sara Pudas; Øystein Sørensen; René Westerhausen; Enikő Zsoldos; Laura Nawijn; Torkild Hovde Lyngstad; Sana Suri; Brenda Penninx; Ole J Rogeberg; Andreas M Brandmaier
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5.  Educational attainment does not influence brain aging.

Authors:  Lars Nyberg; Fredrik Magnussen; Anders Lundquist; William Baaré; David Bartrés-Faz; Lars Bertram; C J Boraxbekk; Andreas M Brandmaier; Christian A Drevon; Klaus Ebmeier; Paolo Ghisletta; Richard N Henson; Carme Junqué; Rogier Kievit; Maike Kleemeyer; Ethan Knights; Simone Kühn; Ulman Lindenberger; Brenda W J H Penninx; Sara Pudas; Øystein Sørensen; Lídia Vaqué-Alcázar; Kristine B Walhovd; Anders M Fjell
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6.  Trends in Dementia Prevalence, Incidence, and Mortality in the United States (2000-2016).

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Journal:  J Aging Health       Date:  2021-07-07

7.  Multimodal Image Analysis of Apparent Brain Age Identifies Physical Fitness as Predictor of Brain Maintenance.

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8.  Inequality of educational opportunity at time of schooling predicts cognitive functioning in later adulthood.

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9.  Verbal intelligence is a more robust cross-sectional measure of cognitive reserve than level of education in healthy older adults.

Authors:  R Boyle; S P Knight; C De Looze; D Carey; S Scarlett; Y Stern; I H Robertson; R A Kenny; R Whelan
Journal:  Alzheimers Res Ther       Date:  2021-07-12       Impact factor: 6.982

10.  Educational attainment and trajectories of cognitive decline during four decades-The Glostrup 1914 cohort.

Authors:  Kristine Harrsen; Kaare Christensen; Rikke Lund; Erik Lykke Mortensen
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-08-02       Impact factor: 3.240

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