Using sibling models to unpack the relationship between education and cognitive functioning in later life

被引:2
|
作者
Herd, Pamela [1 ]
Sicinski, Kamil [2 ]
机构
[1] Georgetown Univ, McCourt Sch Publ Policy, 37th & O St NW Old North,Suite 100, Washington, DC 20057 USA
[2] Univ Wisconsin, Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, Madison, WI USA
关键词
Education polygenic score; Cognitive functioning; Education; SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS; UNITED-STATES; ATTAINMENT; PREVALENCE; DEMENTIA; HEALTH; ACHIEVEMENT; INEQUALITY; SCHOOL; CHILD;
D O I
10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100960
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
As the population ages and the prevalence of dementia increases, unpacking robust and persistent associations between educational attainment and later life cognitive functioning is increasingly important. We do know, from studies with robust causal designs, that policies that increase years of schooling improve later life cognitive functioning. Yet these studies don't illuminate why older adults with greater educational attainment have relatively preserved cognitive functioning. Studies focused on why, however, have been hampered by method-ological limitations and inattention to some key explanations for this relationship. Consequently, we test ex-planations encompassing antecedent factors, specifically family environments, adolescent IQ, and genetic factors, as well as adult mediating mechanisms, specifically health behaviors and health. We employ the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, which includes 80 years of prospectively collected data on a sample of 1 in every 3 high school graduates, and a selected sibling, from the class of 1957. Sibling models, and the inclusion of prospectively collected early and midlife covariates, allows us to address the explanatory and methodological limitations of the prior literature to better unpack the relationship between education and later life cognitive functioning. We find little evidence that early life genetic endowments and environments, or midlife health and health behaviors, explain the relationship. Adolescent cognition, however, does matter; higher educational attainment, linked to antecedent adolescent cognitive functioning, helps protect against lower levels of cognitive functioning in later life. Both adolescent cognition and education, however, independently associate with later life cognitive func-tioning at relatively similar magnitudes. Educational attainment's relationship to later life cognitive functioning is not simply a function of adolescent cognitive functioning.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Spousal Education and Cognitive Functioning in Later Life
    Xu, Minle
    JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY SERIES B-PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, 2020, 75 (07): : E141 - E150
  • [2] GENDER DIFFERENCES ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHILDHOOD SES AND COGNITIVE FUNCTIONING IN LATER LIFE: MODERATING EFFECT OF RACE/ETHNICITY AND EDUCATION
    Lyu, J.
    GERONTOLOGIST, 2012, 52 : 345 - 346
  • [3] Ethnic differences in the relationship between mid-life glycaemia and later-life cognitive functioning and structure
    Williams, E. D.
    Tillin, T.
    Stewart, R.
    Richards, M.
    Shibata, D. K.
    Hughes, A. D.
    Chaturvedi, N.
    DIABETIC MEDICINE, 2016, 33 : 34 - 34
  • [4] Effects of Cognitive Functioning and Education on Later-Life Health Numeracy
    Zamarian, Laura
    Lenhart, Lukas
    Nagele, Melanie
    Steiger, Ruth
    Gizewski, Elke Ruth
    Benke, Thomas
    Scherfler, Christoph
    Delazer, Margarete
    GERONTOLOGY, 2020, 66 (06) : 582 - 592
  • [5] Urbanicity and cognitive functioning in later life
    Lawrence, Elizabeth
    John, Samantha E.
    Bhatta, Tirth
    ALZHEIMER'S & DEMENTIA: DIAGNOSIS, ASSESSMENT & DISEASE MONITORING, 2023, 15 (02)
  • [6] Early life conditions and cognitive functioning in later life
    Everson-Rose, SA
    de Leon, CFM
    Bienias, JL
    Wilson, RS
    Evans, DA
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2003, 158 (11) : 1083 - 1089
  • [7] SUPERIOR COGNITIVE-FUNCTIONING IN LATER LIFE
    MASAKI, K
    WHITE, L
    PETROVITCH, H
    ROSS, W
    LU, J
    NEUROLOGY, 1995, 45 (04) : A271 - A272
  • [8] RELATIONSHIP CLASSIFICATION USING GRADE OF MEMBERSHIP ANALYSIS - A TYPOLOGY OF SIBLING RELATIONSHIPS IN LATER LIFE
    GOLD, DT
    WOODBURY, MA
    GEORGE, LK
    JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY, 1990, 45 (02): : S43 - S51
  • [9] Neuroticism does not affect cognitive functioning in later life
    Jelicic, M
    Bosma, H
    Ponds, RWHM
    Van Boxtel, MPJ
    Houx, PJ
    Jolles, J
    EXPERIMENTAL AGING RESEARCH, 2003, 29 (01) : 73 - 78
  • [10] Cognitive functioning as a predictor of functional disability in later life
    McGuire, LC
    Ford, ES
    Ajani, UA
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY, 2006, 14 (01): : 36 - 42