Ihle Andreas, Fagot Delphine, Vallet Fanny, Ballhausen Nicola, Mella Nathalie, Baeriswyl Marie, Sauter Julia, Oris Michel, Maurer Jürgen, Kliegel Matthias
Department of Psychology.
Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Gerontology and Vulnerability.
Neuropsychology. 2019 Feb;33(2):234-244. doi: 10.1037/neu0000497. Epub 2018 Oct 4.
We investigated cross-lagged relations between leisure activity participation and Trail Making Test (TMT) performance over 6 years and whether those reciprocal associations differed between individuals.
We analyzed data from 232 participants tested on performance in TMT Parts A and B as well as interviewed on leisure activity participation in 2 waves 6 years apart. Mean age in the Wave 1 was 73.42 years. Participants were also tested on vocabulary (Mill Hill scale) as a proxy indicator of crystallized intelligence and reported information on early and midlife cognitive reserve markers (education and occupation). Latent cross-lagged models were applied to investigate potential reciprocal activity-TMT relationships.
The relation of leisure activity participation predicting TMT performance 6 years later was significantly larger than was the relation of TMT performance predicting later leisure activity participation. Statistically comparing different moderator groups revealed that this pattern was evident both in individuals with low education and in those with high education but, notably, emerged in only young-old adults (but not in old-old adults), in individuals with a low cognitive level of job in midlife (but not in those with a high cognitive level of job in midlife), and in individuals with high scores in vocabulary (but not in those with low scores in vocabulary).
Late-life leisure activity participation may predict later cognitive status in terms of TMT performance, but individuals may markedly differ with respect to such effects. Implications for current cognitive reserve and neuropsychological aging research are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
我们研究了6年间休闲活动参与度与连线测验(TMT)表现之间的交叉滞后关系,以及这些相互关系在个体之间是否存在差异。
我们分析了232名参与者的数据,这些参与者接受了TMT A部分和B部分的表现测试,并在相隔6年的两个时间点接受了关于休闲活动参与情况的访谈。第一次测试时的平均年龄为73.42岁。参与者还接受了词汇测试(米尔希尔量表),作为晶体智力的替代指标,并报告了早期和中年认知储备指标(教育程度和职业)的信息。应用潜在交叉滞后模型来研究休闲活动与TMT之间潜在的相互关系。
休闲活动参与度对6年后TMT表现的预测关系显著大于TMT表现对后期休闲活动参与度的预测关系。对不同调节组进行统计学比较发现,这种模式在低学历个体和高学历个体中均很明显,但值得注意的是,仅在年轻老年人(而非年老老年人)、中年工作认知水平低的个体(而非中年工作认知水平高的个体)以及词汇得分高的个体(而非词汇得分低的个体)中出现。
晚年休闲活动参与度可能根据TMT表现预测后期认知状态,但个体在这种影响方面可能存在显著差异。讨论了对当前认知储备和神经心理学衰老研究的启示。(PsycINFO数据库记录(c)2019美国心理学会,保留所有权利)