1 Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, USA.
2 Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA.
J Aging Health. 2019 Oct;31(9):1589-1615. doi: 10.1177/0898264318783489. Epub 2018 Jul 4.
This study examined childhood socioeconomic status (SES) as a predictor of later life cognition and the extent to which midlife SES accounts for associations. Data came from 5,074 participants in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study. Measures from adolescence included parents' educational attainment, father's occupational status, and household income. Memory and language/executive function were assessed at ages 65 and 72 years. Global childhood SES was a stronger predictor of baseline levels of language/executive function than baseline memory. Associations involving parents' education were reduced in size and by statistical significance when accounting for participants' midlife SES, whereas associations involving parental income and occupational status became statistically nonsignificant. We found no associations between childhood SES and change in cognition. Findings contribute to growing evidence that socioeconomic differences in childhood have potential consequences for later life cognition, particularly in terms of the disparate levels of cognition with which people enter later life.
本研究考察了童年社会经济地位(SES)对晚年认知的预测作用,以及中年 SES 在多大程度上解释了这些关联。数据来自威斯康星纵向研究的 5074 名参与者。青少年时期的测量包括父母的受教育程度、父亲的职业地位和家庭收入。记忆力和语言/执行功能在 65 岁和 72 岁时进行评估。总体而言,童年 SES 是语言/执行功能基线水平的更强预测因素,而不是记忆的基线水平。当考虑参与者的中年 SES 时,涉及父母教育的关联在规模和统计学意义上都有所减少,而涉及父母收入和职业地位的关联则变得没有统计学意义。我们没有发现童年 SES 与认知变化之间的关联。研究结果为越来越多的证据提供了补充,即童年时期的社会经济差异对晚年认知有潜在影响,特别是在人们进入晚年时认知水平的差异方面。