Higher Level of Cognitive Reserve Reduces the Risk of Cognitive Difficulties in Healthy Adults

IF 0.4 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
E. Szepietowska, Anna Kuzaka
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Abstract

The study was designed to investigate whether a level of cognitive reserve (CR) is associated with a level of cognitive competences in adults. Evidence from numerous earlier studies suggests that high CR, defined as previously acquired knowledge and experience, plays a protective role with respect to cognitive capacities in adults and senior citizens. Hence, it was hypothesised that a lower CR would predict lower cognitive capacities. The study involved 120 Polish healthy adults (75 women and 45 men) ranging in age from 40 to 85 years (M = 57.42; SD = 10.48). The applied CR index took into account formal education level, involvement in social, occupational and physical activity, and level of social support. The recorded data also included depression level (Beck Depression Inventory, BDI II) and cardiovascular status (hypertension: yes / no). The subjects’ current cognitive competences were assessed using Montreal Cognitive Assessment test (MoCA), Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) subtests, verbal fluency tests and Dysexecutive Questionnaire, self-report version (DEX-S). Based on the subjects’ scores in cognitive tests, a cluster analysis was performed, and the participants were divided into two groups presenting lower cognitive level (LCL) and higher cognitive level (HCL). The LCL subjects were older than HCL and they had higher level of depression and lower CR. In order to determine whether lower level of CR is related to lower level of cognitive abilities in the adults, logistic regression analysis was carried out, also taking into account age, cardiovascular status and depression level. It was shown that the higher level of CR reduced the risk of cognitive deficits. Older age corresponds to poorer cognitive function. The findings showed no interaction between CR and age. Depression and health status did not predict level of cognitive abilities. The current findings are consistent with results of earlier studies: higher level of CR may be associated with a lower risk of cognitive deficits and age is a CR–independent variable that affects cognitive performance: the risk of cognitive decline increases with age. These findings are discussed with reference to models and CR indices.
较高水平的认知储备可降低健康成年人出现认知困难的风险
该研究旨在调查成年人的认知储备水平是否与认知能力水平相关。来自许多早期研究的证据表明,高CR(定义为先前获得的知识和经验)在成年人和老年人的认知能力方面发挥着保护作用。因此,有人假设,较低的CR将预测较低的认知能力。这项研究涉及120名波兰健康成年人(75名女性和45名男性),年龄从40岁到85岁不等(M=57.42;SD=10.48)。应用的CR指数考虑了正规教育水平、参与社会、职业和体育活动以及社会支持水平。记录的数据还包括抑郁水平(贝克抑郁量表,BDI II)和心血管状况(高血压:是/否)。受试者目前的认知能力使用蒙特利尔认知评估测试(MoCA)、韦氏成人智力量表(WAIS)子测验、语言流利性测试和自我报告版执行障碍问卷(DEX-S)进行评估。根据受试者在认知测试中的得分,进行聚类分析,将受试者分为认知水平较低(LCL)和认知水平较高(HCL)的两组。LCL受试者年龄大于HCL,他们有较高的抑郁水平和较低的CR。为了确定较低的CR水平是否与成人较低的认知能力水平有关,进行了逻辑回归分析,同时考虑了年龄、心血管状况和抑郁水平。研究表明,较高水平的CR降低了认知缺陷的风险。年龄越大,认知功能越差。研究结果显示CR与年龄之间没有相互作用。抑郁和健康状况不能预测认知能力的水平。目前的研究结果与早期研究的结果一致:较高的CR水平可能与较低的认知缺陷风险有关,年龄是影响认知表现的CR自变量:认知能力下降的风险随着年龄的增长而增加。参考模型和CR指数对这些发现进行了讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Psihologijske teme
Psihologijske teme Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
审稿时长
30 weeks
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