BASE-Publications:
Abstracts
Lövdén, M., Ghisletta, P., & Lindenberger, U. (2005). Social participation attenuates
decline in perceptual speed in old and very old age. Psychology and Aging, 20, 423–434.
Does an engaged and active lifestyle in old age
alleviate cognitive decline, does high cognitive functioning in old age
increase the possibility of maintaining an engaged and active lifestyle, or
both? The authors approach this conundrum by applying a structural equation
model for testing dynamic hypotheses, the dual change score model (J. J. McArdle & F. Hamagami, 2001),
to 3-occasion longitudinal data from the Berlin Aging Study (Time 1: n = 516,
age range 70 –103 years). Results reveal that within a bivariate
system of perceptual speed and social participation, with age and sociobiographical status as covariates, prior scores of
social participation influence subsequent changes in perceptual speed, while
the opposite does not hold. Results support the hypothesis that an engaged and
active lifestyle in old and very old age may alleviate decline in perceptual
speed.