TY - JOUR
T1 - No moderating influence of education on the association between changes in hippocampus volume and memory performance in aging
AU - Lövdén, Martin
AU - Pagin, Amos
AU - Bartrés-Faz, David
AU - Boraxbekk, Carl-Johan
AU - Brandmaier, Andreas M.
AU - Demnitz, Naiara
AU - Drevon, Christian A.
AU - Ebmeier, Klaus P
AU - Fjell, Anders M
AU - Ghisletta, Paolo
AU - Gorbach, Tetiana
AU - Lindenberger, Ulman
AU - Plachti, Anna
AU - Walhovd, Kristine B
AU - Nyberg, Lars
N1 - © 2023 The Author(s).
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Contemporary accounts of factors that may modify the risk for age-related neurocognitive disorders highlight education and its contribution to a cognitive reserve. By this view, individuals with higher educational attainment should show weaker associations between changes in brain and cognition than individuals with lower educational attainment. We tested this prediction in longitudinal data on hippocampus volume and episodic memory from 708 middle-aged and older individuals using local structural equation modeling. This technique does not require categorization of years of education and does not constrain the shape of relationships, thereby maximizing the chances of revealing an effect of education on the hippocampus-memory association. The results showed that the data were plausible under the assumption that there was no influence of education on the association between change in episodic memory and change in hippocampus volume. Restricting the sample to individuals with elevated genetic risk for dementia (APOE ε4 carriers) did not change these results. We conclude that the influence of education on changes in episodic memory and hippocampus volume is inconsistent with predictions by the cognitive reserve theory.
AB - Contemporary accounts of factors that may modify the risk for age-related neurocognitive disorders highlight education and its contribution to a cognitive reserve. By this view, individuals with higher educational attainment should show weaker associations between changes in brain and cognition than individuals with lower educational attainment. We tested this prediction in longitudinal data on hippocampus volume and episodic memory from 708 middle-aged and older individuals using local structural equation modeling. This technique does not require categorization of years of education and does not constrain the shape of relationships, thereby maximizing the chances of revealing an effect of education on the hippocampus-memory association. The results showed that the data were plausible under the assumption that there was no influence of education on the association between change in episodic memory and change in hippocampus volume. Restricting the sample to individuals with elevated genetic risk for dementia (APOE ε4 carriers) did not change these results. We conclude that the influence of education on changes in episodic memory and hippocampus volume is inconsistent with predictions by the cognitive reserve theory.
U2 - 10.1016/j.nbas.2023.100082
DO - 10.1016/j.nbas.2023.100082
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 37457634
SN - 2589-9589
VL - 4
JO - Aging Brain
JF - Aging Brain
M1 - 100082
ER -