BASE-Publications: Abstracts

Lindenberger, U., & Reischies, F. M. (1999). Limits and potentials of intellectual functioning in old age. In P. B. Baltes, & K. U. Mayer (Eds.), The Berlin Aging Study: Aging from 70 to 100 (pp. 329-359). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

In the first-occasion Intensive Protocol of the Berlin Aging Study (N = 516), a psychometric battery of 14 cognitive tests was used to assess individual differences in five intellectual abilities: reasoning, memory, and perceptual speed from the mechanic (broad fluid) domain, and knowledge and fluency from the pragmatic (broad crystallized) domain. In addition, the Enhanced Cued Recall test (ECR) was administered in the context of a separate neuropsychological examination to identify dementia-specific cognitive impairments in cue utilization and learning potential. The overall pattern of results points to sizable and highly intercorrelated age-based losses in various aspects of presumably brain-related functioning, including sensory functions such as vision and hearing. Intellectual abilities had negative linear relations to age, with more pronounced age-based reductions in mechanic than pragmatic abilities. Ability intercorrelations formed a highly positive manifold, and did not follow the mechanic-pragmatic distinction. Gender differences were small in size, and did not interact with age. Indicators of sensory and sensorimotor functioning were strongly related to intellectual functioning, accounting for 59% of the total reliable variance in general intelligence. Even for knowledge, sociobiographical indicators were less closely linked to intellectual functioning than the sensory-sensorimotor variables, and accounted for 24% of the variance in general intelligence. With respect to potentials, results obtained with the ECR demonstrate that the ability to learn from experience is preserved in normal cognitive aging across the entire age range studied, but severely impaired in individuals with dementia.