Correlated and Coupled Cognitive Change in Older Adults With and Without Preclinical Dementia. |
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Authors: | Sliwinski Martin J; Hofer Scott M; Hall Charles |
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Abstract: | Common factor aging theories state that correlations among cognitive age effects signify a single underlying causal process. The logic underlying this proposition was evaluated by examining correlated cognitive change in a sample of 391 initially nondemented older adults who were tested annually for up to 16 years. Between-person correlations among rates of change (range=.56-.61) were partly attributable to model misspecification and the aggregation of heterogeneous groups of individuals. Correlated within-person cognitive change was much stronger in the cases (.45-.51) than in the noncases (.07-.18). These results demonstrate that correlated change may either signify causal commonality or the cumulative effects of multiple age-related conditions that can affect multiple cognitive systems. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | correlated cognitive change coupled cognitive change aging cognitive age effects older adults dementia cognitive ability |
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