BASE-Publications:
Abstracts
Intellectual
functioning in old and very old age: Cross-sectional results from the Berlin
Aging Study
Ulman Lindenberger & Paul B. Baltes (1997)
Psychology and Aging, 12, 410-432
This study documents age trends,
interrelations, and correlates of intellectual abilities in old and very old
age (70-103 years) from the Berlin Aging Study (N = 516). Fourteen tests were
used to assess 5 abilities: reasoning, memory, and perceptual speed from the
mechanic (broad fluid) domain and knowledge and fluency from the pragmatic
(broad crystallized) domain. Intellectual abilities had negative linear age
relations, with more pronounced age reductions in mechanic than in pragmatic
abilities. Interrelations among intellectual abilities were highly positive and
did not follow the mechanic-pragmatic distinction. Sociobiographical indicators
were less closely linked to intellectual functioning than sensory-sensorimotor
variables, which predicted 59% of the total reliable variance in general
intelligence. Results suggest that aging-induced biological factors are a
prominent source of individual differences in intelligence in old and very old
age.