Religiosity does not prevent cognitive declines: Cross-sectional and longitudinal evidence from the Survey of Health, Aging and Retirement in Europe

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Florian Dürlinger, Jonathan Fries, Takuya Yanagida, Jakob Pietschnig
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Abstract

Over the past hundred years, a plethora of studies on intelligence and religiosity associations predominantly yielded evidence for a meaningful negative relation between these two variables. However, effect strengths varied substantially between primary studies and it has been suggested that religiosity and intelligence associations change as people age, because religiosity may play a protective role for cognitive abilities in elderly individuals. Consequently, it has been suggested that negative intelligence and religiosity associations may decline in strength or even reverse signs as people age. Therefore, we examine here cross-sectional associations of self-reported religious behaviors and several measures of cognitive function (numeracy, verbal fluency, memory and a proxy of psychometric g) as well as their cross-temporal changes in respondents from 11 European countries and Israel aged 50+ years (N = 30,424) in three waves of the Survey of Health, Aging, and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). As expected, cognitive function scores were meaningfully negatively related to praying whilst associations with participation in religious services were trivial. Cross-lagged panel analyses yielded consistently negative, albeit small, effects of both intelligence on praying and of praying on intelligence. Multilevel random-intercept regressions showed tentative evidence for faster cognitive declines in more religious people for numeracy and g, but not for verbal fluency and memory. No conclusive evidence for a moderation by societal values of religiosity could be found. In all, our evidence shows a negative, non-trivial association between intelligence and religiosity in elderly participants which remains longitudinally robust. These findings corroborate the generality of the small negative intelligence and religiosity association.

宗教信仰不能防止认知能力下降:来自欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查的横断面和纵向证据
在过去的一百年里,大量关于智力和宗教信仰关联的研究主要为这两个变量之间存在有意义的负相关提供了证据。然而,初级研究之间的效应强度差异很大,有人认为,宗教信仰和智力关联会随着年龄的增长而变化,因为宗教信仰可能对老年人的认知能力起到保护作用。因此,有人认为,随着年龄的增长,负智力和宗教信仰的联系可能会减弱,甚至逆转。因此,我们在这里研究了来自11个欧洲国家和以色列的50岁以上受访者(N=30424)在三波健康、老龄化、,以及欧洲退休(SHARE)。正如预期的那样,认知功能得分与祈祷呈显著负相关,而与参与宗教服务的关联则微不足道。交叉滞后小组分析得出了智力对祈祷和祈祷对智力的负面影响,尽管影响很小。多水平随机截距回归显示,初步证据表明,信奉宗教的人在算术和g方面的认知能力下降更快,但在语言流利性和记忆力方面则不然。没有确凿的证据表明宗教信仰的社会价值观是温和的。总之,我们的证据表明,老年参与者的智力和宗教信仰之间存在着负面的、非琐碎的联系,这种联系在纵向上仍然很牢固。这些发现证实了小负智力和宗教信仰关联的普遍性。
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
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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