COGNITIVE FUNCTION IN 70-YEAR-OLD MEN AND WOMEN - A 16-YEAR COHORT DIFFERENCE POPULATION STUDY

Citation
G. Steen et al., COGNITIVE FUNCTION IN 70-YEAR-OLD MEN AND WOMEN - A 16-YEAR COHORT DIFFERENCE POPULATION STUDY, Aging, 10(2), 1998, pp. 120-126
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Geiatric & Gerontology
Journal title
AgingACNP
ISSN journal
03949532
Volume
10
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
120 - 126
Database
ISI
SICI code
0394-9532(1998)10:2<120:CFI7MA>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
Cohort differences in cognitive functioning were studied in two 70-yea r-old samples born 16 years apart, 1906/07 and 1922, and living in Got eborg, Sweden. Psychometric tests measuring verbal ability, inductive reasoning, spatial ability, perceptual speed, secondary memory, and pr imary memory were used. All tests showed significantly better results in the latter 70-year-old cohort. Longer education and better living c onditions in this cohort help to explain the results. Differences in s omatic health could not explain the cognitive differences in this popu lation. If biological age is defined as inversely related to the remai nder of an individual's life span, the increasing life expectancy also means that the 70-year olds in 1992 are biologically younger than the ir 1976/77 counterparts. (Aging Clin. Exp. Res. 10: 120-126, 1998) (C) 1998, Editrice Kurtis.