AI Article Synopsis

  • Cognitive problems like memory and language issues are a growing public health concern, particularly starting in midlife, yet research on their risk and protective factors is limited.
  • A study of 883 Mexican-origin adults over 12 years found that personality traits (like Neuroticism, Conscientiousness, Openness, and Extraversion) significantly affected cognitive function, with high Neuroticism linked to worse outcomes and high Conscientiousness associated with better memory and mental abilities.
  • Socioeconomic factors, including income and economic stress, also played a crucial role, showing that better economic conditions improve cognitive function, while increased financial stress worsens it; additionally, higher education levels were beneficial for cognitive health over time.

Article Abstract

Problems with memory, executive function, and language are a significant public health concern, especially when they begin during midlife. However, there is relatively little work on risk and protective factors for cognitive function in middle adulthood. Using data from 883 Mexican-origin adults assessed up to 6 times across 12 years ( at Time 1 = 38.2 years; range = 27-63 years), the present study examined whether developmental trajectories (levels and slopes) of Big Five personality domains and socioeconomic factors (per capita income, economic stress) were prospectively associated with cognitive function (memory, mental status, verbal fluency) at the final assessment. We found that individuals with higher levels of, and smaller decreases in, Neuroticism had worse cognitive function 12 years later. Further, individuals with higher initial Conscientiousness had better subsequent memory, mental status, and verbal fluency, and individuals with higher Openness and Extraversion had better subsequent verbal fluency (but not memory or mental status). The trajectories of per capita income and economic stress were robustly associated with cognitive function, such that higher initial levels and greater increases in socioeconomic resources had protective associations, whereas higher levels and greater increases in economic stress had deleterious associations with cognitive function. Higher education level was associated with better cognitive function 12 years later. These findings suggest that changes in personality and socioeconomic factors across adulthood are associated with cognitive function, which may be informative for interventions to support healthier cognitive aging starting at least as early as midlife. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10721735PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/pag0000755DOI Listing

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