| Literature DB >> 34255824 |
Anna West1, Noah Hamlin1, Sophia Frangou2,3, Tony W Wilson1, Gaelle E Doucet1.
Abstract
Healthy aging is typically associated with some level of cognitive decline, but there is substantial variation in such decline among older adults. The mechanisms behind such heterogeneity remain unclear but some have suggested a role for cognitive reserve. In this work, we propose the "person-based similarity index" for cognition (PBSI-Cog) as a proxy for cognitive reserve in older adults, and use the metric to quantify similarity between the cognitive profiles of healthy older and younger participants. In the current study, we computed this metric in 237 healthy older adults (55-88 years) using a reference group of 156 younger adults (18-39 years) taken from the Cambridge Center for Ageing and Neuroscience dataset. Our key findings revealed that PBSI-Cog scores in older adults were: 1) negatively associated with age (rho = -0.25, P = 10-4) and positively associated with higher education (t = 2.4, P = 0.02), 2) largely explained by fluid intelligence and executive function, and 3) predicted more by functional connectivity between lower- and higher-order resting-state networks than brain structural morphometry or education. Particularly, we found that higher segregation between the sensorimotor and executive networks predicted higher PBSI-Cog scores. Our results support the notion that brain network functional organization may underly variability in cognitive reserve in late adulthood.Entities:
Keywords: brain functional connectivity; brain structural morphometry; cognitive reserve; late adulthood; person-based similarity index
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34255824 PMCID: PMC8754370 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhab215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 4.861