Title: What Is Normal Cognitive Aging A Provisional Definition
1What Is Normal Cognitive Aging? A Provisional
Definition
- Normal cognitive aging is continuing to function
at a level characteristic of our age group as
influenced by relevant demographic factors - Memory within normal limits
- Overall cognitive functioning is no lower than
the bottom 7 of age group, with no more than
one aptitude below than that level - (such as attention, spatial, calculation
skills)
PSYC S-1293, 2004
2What Is Normal Cognitive Aging? A Provisional
Definition (Contd)
- Normal cognitive aging is also being inattentive
to potential problems associated with normal
age-related cognitive decline - Assuming that one functions as well cognitively
in the Third Age (60-80) as in the prime of
life, ignoring evidence to the contrary - Being unaware, as opposed to being aware, of
activities that are associated with optimal
cognitive aging
PSYC S-1293, 2004
3Average WAIS Full Scale IQ Scores for Age Groups
25-34 to 75Normal Subjects
Kaufman, 1990
4Difference in Decline Rate With
AgingCrystallized Fluid Abilities
- Crystallized slower
- Less time pressure
- More education related
- Single task attention
- Vocabulary
- Information
- Calculation
- Fluid faster decline
- More time pressure
- Less education related
- Dual task attention
- Working memory
- Spatial abilities
- Reasoning
- Memory after delay
5Change in WAIS-R Verbal IQs Across the 20- to
74-year Range
Kaufman, 1990
6What Explains Age-Related Decline Rate in
Cognitive Abilities?
- Slowing of processing spend
- Shrinking of working memory
- Growing cognitive disinhibition
7Response Time and Aging Research Studies
Salthouse, 1991
8Working Memory
- Working Memory The ability to retain
information in memory while simultaneously
using this and other information to solve a
problem - Analogous to your desktop when writing term
paper - Or, RAM (random access memory)
9Working Memory and Age Performance on Analogies
Salthouse, 1992
10Growing Age Related Cognitive DisinhibitionResult
s
- Major impact of age-related cognitive
disinhibition is upon tasks requiring
concentration and working memory - Disinhibition grows with age, especially in the
tendency to have past methods of problem solving
persist in new settings - Processing speed does decline with age
- But declining inhibition had greater negative
impact - Vocabulary doesnt decline with age
- Gender differences Men read faster, but women
remember verbal content better
Persad, et al., 2002
11Verbal Fluency Write Down All Words Beginning
With C, F, or L
- Average in one minute
- 60-65 13.80
- 71-75 12.25 11 decline from 60-65
- 81-85 10.16 26 decline from 60-65
Persad, et al., 2002
12Use It or Lose ItHow Much Does Experience Count?
13Test Scores of Older Faculty Compared to Younger
Colleagues
Sward,1945
14The Immeasurable Dimensions of Experience
- Self Knowledge
- Store of accumulated information
- Discriminating important from unimportant
- Knowing how to proceed with complex tasks
- Understanding the rhythm of things
- Considering possible problem solving scenarios
- Accessing resources
Salthouse Mitchell, 1990
15Do Men and Women Differ in Aptitudes?
16Gender Differences on Cognitive Tests
- With high aptitude groups (Terman, Project
Talent) males are more numerous among the high
scorers - Not unusual to have more males among the
graduating Summas in sciences and math - But more at bottom of class, too
- May have to do with variability
17The Bell Curve of Normal Distribution of Test
Scores
Lots
Few
IQ
18Hypothetical Distribution of Group As Scores on
a Cognitive Test
19Hypothetical Distribution of Group Bs Scores on
a Cognitive Test
20Hypothetical Differences in the Distribution of
Scores of Groups A B on a Cognitive Test
21Gender Differences on Cognitive Tests
- A consistent finding has been that M W do not
differ much on cognitive test averages - Especially when the testing is of large numbers
of diverse Ss - Elite groups show greater gender differences in
spatial/math scores
22Gender Differences in Reading Test Scores100
Studies
Hyde, et al., 1990
23Gender Differences
- Bottom line is that few differences in aptitude
have emerged, and those were small - Most differences at extremes or tails of bell
curve - For instance, older men were often stronger on
tests of number memory and spatial tasks - Older women stronger on verbal memory tasks
- Gender differences on tests are much smaller than
the impact of energy, diligence, social skills,
etc. - Could the differences between the sexes be more a
function of generation than gender?
24Class 5 Optimal Cognitive Aging
- Optimal cognitive aging
- Variability as evidence for OCA
- Moderate exercise
- Diurnal variation
- Glucose level
- Blood pressure control
- Cognitive training
- Diverse challenging intellectual activities
- Selection, optimization compensation
25What Is Optimal Cognitive Aging?
- Optimal cognitive aging is continuing to function
at the highest possible level in the context of
the inevitable limitations that growing older
places upon us - It is being aware, as opposed to being unaware,
of the beneficial effects of certain physical,
intellectual, and psychosocial activities on
cognition
PSYC S-1293, 2004
26What Is Optimal Cognitive Aging? (Cont)
- Optimal cognitive aging is also doing, as
opposed to not doing, things that are known to
maintain and enhance intellectual functioning - It is regularly appraising cognitive status, and
making adjustments as needed - Optimal cognitive aging is getting the best out
of what is possible for as long as possible
PSYC S-1293, 2004
27Standards for OCAPreliminary Conclusions
- Standards for OCA are relative and subjective,
based on self judgments, and confirmed by
objective observer - Criteria usually relative to age group peers and
self 5 years earlier - Standards involve overall HRQOL
- Evidence of recognition of age imposed
limitations and making adjustments
PSYC S-1293, 2006
28Standards for OCA Characteristics of ACAgers
from Interviews
- Hi energy
- Engaged in satisfying activities
- Efforts to maintain mental acuity
- Active social networks
- Recognize/accept decline in cognitive abilities
- Selection, optimization compensation
PSYC S-1293, 2006
29Optimal Aging Rectangular Model
Rabbitt, 1990
30More Realistic Rectangular Model of Optimal
Aging Intellectual Ability
Territory to be gained
Powell, 1994
31Chronological vs. Functional Age
- Chronological age Calendar years
- Functional age Objective physical and mental
state and performance - Why important Demographic, phys/psych,
economic, legislative changes
32What Percentage of Older Adults Could Be Said to
Meet Criteria for OCA?
33 of Optimal Cognitive AgersTest Scores Higher
Than ½ of Those Age 45-54
6
Powell,1994
34 of Optimal Cognitive AgersTest Scores Higher
Than Lowest 7 of Those Age 45-54
Powell,1994
35Aerobic Fitness Cognition in Older Ss SLC
Prospective Study
- In Salt Lake City investigators looked at link
between exercise and cognition - Their question was whether exercise would
improve cognition of previously sedentary men
women - Divided Ss into 3 groups Exercise,
Flexibility/Strength, No-Exercise
Dustman et al, 1984
36Aerobic Fitness Cognition in Older Ss SLC
Prospective Study
- Exercise 3 X 1-hour sessions per week for 4
months. Aerobic exercise was fast walking, slow
jogging (70-80 max heart rate) - Flexibility/Strength Participated in strength
flexibility exercises but not aerobic training - Non-Exercise ControlParticipated in neither
aerobic or strength/flex exercises - All three groups tested with cognitive tests
before after the fitness training
Dustman et al, 1984
37Aerobic Fitness Cognition in Older Ss SLC
Prospective Study
Dustman, et al, 1983
38Effects of Fitness Training on Cognition of Older
Adults Meta-analyses
- Q These authors ask is Does fitness training
enhance cognitive vitality of older people? - Meta-analysis of 18 studies from 1966-2001
- Excluded many others for shoddy design
- 197 Ss 55-80 higher of females
- 101 exercisers, 97 control Ss
- Ages of Ss young-old (55-65) mid-old (66-70)
old-old (71-80)
Colcombe Kramer, 2003
39Effects of Fitness Training on Cognition of Older
Adults Meta-analyses
- Program duration
- Short (1-3 months)
- Medium (4-6 months)
- Long (6 months)
- Session duration
- Short (15-30 minutes)
- Medium (31-45 minutes)
- Long (46-60 minutes)
Colcombe Kramer, 2003
40Effects of Fitness Training on Cognition of Older
Adults Meta-analyses
- Cognitive abilities measured
- Executive Planning, reasoning, multi-tasking
- Control Inhibition
- Speed Response or reaction time
- Spatial Recall, rotate, or transform forms
- Types of training
- Aerobic, emphasizing cardiovascular training
- Combination, aerobic strength
Colcombe Kramer, 2003
41Effect Size (ES) Statistic
- Often used in meta-analyses
- Effect size useful when estimating influence of
one variable (exercise) on another (cognition) - Virtue is they are independent of sample size
and significance (p) values - Most effect sizes are under 1.00
- When judging importance of effect sizes, I think
of them this way .90 (very large influence)
.60- .80 (large) .30-.50 (medium) lt.20 (small
influence)
Cohen, 1988
42Results of Meta-Analysis Forms of Exercise
Cognitive Benefits
- Training Cardio only-ES of .41 Combined-.59
- Duration 1-3 mos (.52) 4-6 mos (.27)
- 6 mos (.67)
- Session length 15-30 min (.18) 31-45 min
(.61) 46-60 min (.47) - Ss age 55-65 (.30) 66-70 (.69)
- 71-80 (.55)
Colcombe Kramer, 2003
43Effect Sizes for All Fitness Training on
Cognition of Older Adults
Colcombe Kramer, 2003
44Impact of Activity on Cerebral Blood Flow
Cognition After 65
- Texas researchers followed 3 groups of Ss
beginning just before age 65 - Groups were working (active), retired (active)
retired (inactive) - Activity calculated on calories expended per
week - Looked at impact of activity on cerebral blood
flow (CBF) cognition
Rogers et al, 1990
45Activity and Cerebral Blood Flow Four Years
After Retirement at 65
Rogers et al, 1990
46Can Aerobic Fitness Reduce Brain Tissue Loss in
Elders?
- From 30 to 90 humans lose 25 of brain tissue
density due to aging - Studies show exercise associated with higher
levels of cognition - Investigated whether exercise associated with
less age-related loss of brain tissue
Colcombe, et al., 2003
47Can Aerobic Fitness Reduce Brain Tissue Loss in
Elders?
- 55 Ss (55-77, ave. 67) were tested for aerobic
fitness, based on VO2max - Each S received MRI brain scan
- Fitness and brain density compared
- Fitter Ss had less loss of brain tissue
- Effects were in frontal, parietal, and temporal
areas - Study not been replicated
Colcombe, et al., 2003
48Diurnal Variation When Are Younger Older
People at Their Best?
- Two studies comparing older younger Ss on
optimal time of day - 1st asked about optimal time of day morning,
evening or neutral - 2nd tested recognition memory for passages they
had read
49Diurnal Variation When Are Younger Older
People at Their Best?
May, et al., 1993
50Diurnal Variation When Are Young Old People at
Their Best?
May, et al., 1993
51Glucose Effects on Cognition In Older Folks
- Would older Ss perform better on cognitive tests
after drinking glucose? - Recruited Ss(62-84,M73) to drink either glucose
or saccharin and take cognitive tests after each
Manning, et al., 1990
52Glucose Effects on Cognition in Older Folks
- Significant differences for glucose on
- Recall of story after 5 delay
- Recall of story after 40 delay
- Recall of wordlist (no delay)
- These abilities often decline with age
Manning, et al., 1990
53Blood Pressure and Cognition
- Data from the Framingham (Heart) Study compared
cognitive test scores and blood pressure (BP) - 506 normal and hypertensive Ss compared on
Speed, Executive Function, Episodic Memory,
Attention, Memory - Found correlation between elevated BP and
diminished cognition above 160/90
Saxby, et al, 2003
54Blood Pressure and Cognition
- Found correlation between elevated BP and
diminished cognition above 160/90 - Specifically, hypertensive group had relative
deficits in Speed, Episodic Working Memory,
and Executive Function
Saxby, et al, 2003
55Blood Pressure and Cognition
- Data from the Framingham (Heart) Study compared
cognitive test scores and blood pressure (BP) - Found correlation between elevated BP and
diminished cognition above 140/90 - Negative effects of elevated BP on cognition far
greater for younger adults
56Blood Pressure and CognitionNormal
Hypertensive Adults
- Q Is higher BP (blood pressure) correlated with
lower scores on cognitive tests? - Controlled for age, education, and gender
- 301 Ss (20 to 75, Mean44) had BP taken and were
given cognitive tests - Ss divided into 2 groups
- Normotensive (lt140/90)
- Hypertensive (gt140/90)
Elias, et al. 1990
57Blood Pressure and Cognition Findings
- Linear relationship between hypertension and
cognition for all ages - Diastolic blood pressure more negatively
correlated with overall cognition than Systolic
blood pressure - Lower test scores were on Overall Score, as well
as reasoning, memory, and spatial recall - Negative effects of elevated Diastolic BP on
cognition greater for younger Ss
Elias, et al. 1990
58Blood Pressure and CognitionNormal
Hypertensive Adults
- Q Why do they say effects of hypertension
greater for younger adults? Two reasons - (1)Healthy survivor effect
- (2) Probably because younger Ss are mostly in
very good health and so do well on NP tests - Therefore, small differences are significant
- Oldsters in poorer health, so even larger test
differences are obscured by more variability
Elias, et al. 1990
59Ideas for Remaining an Optimal Cognitive Ager
- Seek new learning experiences
- Challenge yourself
- Engage the new technology
- Improve declining skills through training
60Role of Diverse Challenging Intellectual
Activities in OCA
- A consensus of numerous experts, i.e., Marian
Diamond Werner Schaie supports this idea - Involvement in complex, intellectually
stimulating activities - Seeking challenges, intellectual and other
- Spending time with interesting people, with a
variety of interests/talents - Being in a relationship where activities/interest
s are shared
61Study of Differences Between OCA and NCA MDs in
Florida
- Questions thought to be correlated with OCA were
asked - 20 OCA males 20 NCA males completed
questionnaire and were interviewed - Domains were physical, intellectual, social and
psychological - Several significant findings emerged
Anderson, 1992
62Physical Variables Correlating With OCA Among
Physicians
- Age -.34
- Exercise Correlation
- Hours NS
- Purpose NS
- Feel afterglow NS
- Vigorous NS
- Moderate .31
- Sexual Energy
- At 45 NS
- At 55 .56
- At 65 .42
Anderson, 1992
63Reading Activities Correlating With OCA Among
Physicians
- Age -.34
- Hours NS
- Newspapers NS
- Prof Journals NS
- Challenging mags .62
- Magazines for fun .36
- Books for fun .41
Anderson, 1992
64Social Variables Correlating With OCA Among
Physicians
- Age -.34
- Social Relationships Correlation
- In primary rel/ship NS
- Comfort from rel/ship NS
- Duration .36
- Contact with children/ .41
- younger generation
Anderson, 1992
65Psychological Variables Correlating With OCA
Among Physicians
- Age -.34
- Feel Joy .42
- Responses to Stress
- Think about future consequences .39
- Find humor .42
- Feel initially intimidated .41
-
Anderson, 1992
66Cognitive Training Nearly Everything Works
PSYC S-1293, 2005
67Approaches to Cognitive Training of Older People
Examples
- Ss in rural PA were given 2 hours of classroom
training in reasoning, spatial abilities, and
verbal memory results were improvement in
pre/post test scores - Ss in Germany divided into three groups 1 given
5 hours of group tutoring to improve performance
on mazes and vocabulary 2 studied for same
amount of time with self-guided manual 3
nothing both Tutored and Self-Study groups
improved at post-test, but stronger performance
by Tutored Ss on spatial ability
PSYC S-1293, 2005
68Mnemonic Training10 Item Grocery List to
Memorize
- Celery Onions
- Bagels Cream cheese
- Orange Juice Coffee
- Soup Pasta Sauce
- Post-Its Rug Cleaner
-
-
PSYC S-1293, 2005
69Mnemonic Training What Strategies Did You Use?
PSYC S-1293, 2005
70What Mnemonic Strategies Did You Use? Some
Possibilities
- Straight memorization
- Cued recall
- BCCCOOPPRS
- Clustering (breakfast, vegetables, drinks, cans,
other) - Method of loci (associating item to be recalled
with rooms in a house or subway stops)
PSYC S-1293, 2005
71Cognitive TrainingIndirect Approaches Work, Too
PSYC S-1293, 2005
72Indirect Approaches Does Playing Bridge Improve
Cognition?
- Compared older bridge players to non-card playing
controls. Higher Scores by bridge players - In working memory
- Backward digit span
- Letter sets
- In reasoning
- Matrices
- Letter series
- Not in
- Response time
- Vocabulary
PSYC S-1293, 2005
73Transcendental Meditationand Cognition
- Anxiety impedes the capacity to focus attention,
anything that lowers anxiety improves mental
function - Psychologists at Harvard and Maharishi
International University taught a group of 80
year olds transcendental meditation (TM) - Those receiving TM improved on memory, word
fluency, and reasoning - At follow-up three years later, all of those
receiving TM were still alive. This compares
with an overall survival rate of for this age
group of 63.
Alexander, et al, 1989
74Enhancing Cognitive Vitality in Older Adults
- Authors review impact of training on reducing
the magnitude of age- related cognitive decline - Examines impact of experience
- Reviews fitness and cognitive sparing
- Discusses laboratory-based training
Kramer Willis, 2002
75Enhancing Cognitive Vitality in Older Adults
- Role of experience
- Some studies show less decline among experienced
typists pianists - But they practiced longer and harder than younger
Ss - Role of fitness
- Some, but not all, studies show positive effects
- Greatest impact could be on executive
functions planning, inhibition, working memory,
multi-tasking
Kramer Willis, 2002
76Enhancing Cognitive Vitality in Older Adults
- Looking at laboratory training authors conclude
- Training can improve cognition of old young
- Can improve targeted skills, and not others
- Especially when the task involves accuracy
alone, not speed accuracy
Kramer Willis, 2002
77Enhancing Cognitive Vitality in Older Adults
- Older (64-95) Ss from the Seattle Longitudinal
Study were tested about every 7 years - Ss were divided into 2 groups (1) those whose
scores in reasoning spatial skills remained
stable over the previous 14 years and (2) those
whose scores had declined - With 5 hours of training Ss whose scores had
declined improved to the level 14 years earlier
Kramer Willis, 2002
78Stable Ss Effect of Training on Spatial Ability
by Gender
Willis Schaie, 1988
79Decline Ss Effect of Training on Spatial Ability
by Gender
Willis Schaie, 1988
80Limitations of Cognitive Training Studies
- Some cautions are warranted
- Not all studies produce positive results
- Effects seem narrow, only on the specific
aptitude being trained - No studies have as yet looked at whether
the improved test performance generalizes to the
real world
Kramer Willis, 2002
81Selective Optimization With Compensation
- 3 interactive elements
- l Selection
- l Optimization
- l Compensation
Baltes, 1997
82Selective Optimization With Compensation
- Selection
- l Concentration on fewer things
- l Where opportunities, abilities and
- motivation converge
- l Give up something where satisfaction less
possible now or would interfere - l Allows more satisfaction, personal
control - Examples?
Baltes, 1997
83Selective Optimization With Compensation
- Optimization
- l Focus on selected activities that
- are most satisfying
- l Work to improve or maintain skills
- l Means letting other activities
- decline
- Examples?
Baltes, 1997
84Selective Optimization With Compensation
- Compensation
- l Maximizing ability to continue to perform
- or participate in activities
- l In context of reduced capacities
- l By
- More thorough preparation
- Training
- Technology
- Examples?
Baltes, 1997