Cognitive functioning in healthy aging: the role of reserve and lifestyle factors early in life.
暂无分享,去创建一个
T. Fritsch | R. Friedland | M. Mcclendon | K. Smyth | A. Lerner | J. Larsen | Thomas Fritsch | Alan J Lerner | Robert P Friedland | McKee J McClendon | Kathleen A Smyth | Janet D Larsen
[1] W. Greenough,et al. Environmental influences on cognitive and brain plasticity during aging. , 2004, The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences.
[2] J. Brandt,et al. Intelligence and education as predictors of cognitive state in late life , 1995, Neurology.
[3] R. Katzman.,et al. Education and the prevalence of dementia and Alzheimer's disease , 1993, Neurology.
[4] J. Eccles,et al. Extracurricular Activities and Adolescent Development , 2003 .
[5] T. Arbuckle,et al. The role of psychosocial context, age, and intelligence in memory performance of older men. , 1992, Psychology and aging.
[6] P. Satz. Brain reserve capacity on symptom onset after brain injury: A formulation and review of evidence for threshold theory. , 1993 .
[7] Carmi Schooler,et al. The Reciprocal Effects of the Substantive Complexity of Work and Intellectual Flexibility: A Longitudinal Assessment , 1978, American Journal of Sociology.
[8] T. Salthouse,et al. Is age kinder to females than to males? , 1998 .
[9] T. Fritsch,et al. Worker functions and traits associated with occupations and the development of AD , 2004, Neurology.
[10] M. Kliegel,et al. Life-long intellectual activities mediate the predictive effect of early education on cognitive impairment in centenarians: a retrospective study , 2004, Aging & mental health.
[11] C. Schooler,et al. The reciprocal effects of leisure time activities and intellectual functioning in older people: a longitudinal analysis. , 2001, Psychology and aging.
[12] W. S. Miller. The Variation and Significance of Intelligence Quotients Obtained from Group Tests. , 1924 .
[13] R. Mohs,et al. Consortium to establish a registry for Alzheimer's disease (CERAD) clinical and neuropsychological assessment of Alzheimer's disease. , 2002, Psychopharmacology bulletin.
[14] M. Kohn,et al. Continuity of Learning-Generalization: The Effect of Job on Men's Intellective Process in the United States and Poland , 1985, American Journal of Sociology.
[15] M. Strauss,et al. Associations Between Dementia/Mild Cognitive Impairment and Cognitive Performance and Activity Levels in Youth , 2005, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
[16] R. Hardy,et al. Does active leisure protect cognition? Evidence from a national birth cohort. , 2003, Social science & medicine.
[17] S. Birge,et al. A Simple Test of Central Processing Speed: An Extension of the Short Blessed Test , 1999, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
[18] R. Dixon,et al. Use it or lose it: engaged lifestyle as a buffer of cognitive decline in aging? , 1999, Psychology and aging.
[19] R. Friedland,et al. Epidemiology, education, and the ecology of Alzheimer's disease , 1993, Neurology.
[20] U. DeBoni,et al. Brain Aging and Alzheimer's Disease* , 1978, Canadian Psychiatric Association journal.
[21] Y. Stern. What is cognitive reserve? Theory and research application of the reserve concept , 2002, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.
[22] Susan F Tapert,et al. fMRI reveals alteration of spatial working memory networks across adolescence , 2005, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.
[23] D. Deeg,et al. Activity in older adults: cause or consequence of cognitive functioning? A longitudinal study on everyday activities and cognitive performance in older adults. , 2002, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.
[24] Marcus Richards,et al. Lifetime Antecedents of Cognitive Reserve , 2003, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.
[25] J. Elashoff,et al. Multiple Regression in Behavioral Research. , 1975 .
[26] Timothy A. Salthouse,et al. Theoretical Perspectives on Cognitive Aging , 1991 .
[27] Michael D. Beck. The Otis and Otis-Lennon Tests: Their Contributions. , 1986 .
[28] K. Schaie,et al. An Historical Framework for Cohort Differences in Intelligence , 2005, Research in human development.
[29] H. Christensen,et al. Use It and Still Lose It? The Association Between Activity and Cognitive Performance Established Using Latent Growth Techniques in a Community Sample , 2003 .
[30] D. F. Swaab,et al. Brain aging and Alzheimer's disease, “Wear and tear” versus “Use it or lose it” , 1991, Neurobiology of Aging.
[31] N. Butters,et al. The Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease (CERAD). Part V. A normative study of the neuropsychological battery , 1994, Neurology.
[32] Ronald Glaser,et al. Emotions, morbidity, and mortality: new perspectives from psychoneuroimmunology. , 2002, Annual review of psychology.
[33] M. Linn,et al. Gender differences in verbal ability: A meta-analysis. , 1988 .
[34] T. Arbuckle,et al. Cognitive functioning of older people in relation to social and personality variables. , 1986, Psychology and aging.
[35] D. Hultsch,et al. Age differences in cognitive performance in later life: relationships to self-reported health and activity life style. , 1993, Journal of gerontology.
[36] A. Herlitz,et al. Gender differences in episodic memory , 1997, Memory & cognition.
[37] E. Tangalos,et al. Mild Cognitive Impairment Clinical Characterization and Outcome , 1999 .
[38] W. Rosen,et al. Verbal fluency in aging and dementia , 1980 .
[39] S. W. Mitchell,et al. Wear and tear , 1871 .
[40] D. Bennett,et al. Early and late life cognitive activity and cognitive systems in old age , 2005, Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.
[41] J. Sweeney,et al. The Emergence of Collaborative Brain Function: fMRI Studies of the Development of Response Inhibition , 2004, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[42] Robert P. Friedland,et al. Patients with Alzheimer's disease have reduced activities in midlife compared with healthy control-group members , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[43] E. Milbrandt,et al. Use it or lose it! , 2008, Critical care medicine.
[44] M. Mcclendon,et al. Multiple Regression and Causal Analysis , 1994 .
[45] J. Breitner,et al. Detection of dementia in the elderly using telephone screening of cognitive status , 1993 .
[46] T. Fritsch,et al. The Role of Adolescent IQ and Gender in the Use of Cognitive Support for Remembering in Aging , 2007, Neuropsychology, development, and cognition. Section B, Aging, neuropsychology and cognition.
[47] S. Folstein,et al. "Mini-mental state". A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. , 1975, Journal of psychiatric research.
[48] D. Rowland,et al. Validation of a Telephone Cognitive Assessment Battery , 1997, Journal of The American Geriatrics Society.
[49] Michael J. Helms,et al. Properties of the telephone interview for cognitive status: Application in epidemiological and longitudinal studies , 1994 .
[50] A. Mackinnon,et al. The association between mental, social and physical activity and cognitive performance in young and old subjects. , 1993, Age and ageing.
[51] I. Deary,et al. A life course approach to cognitive reserve: A model for cognitive aging and development? , 2005, Annals of neurology.
[52] R. Hauser,et al. The Decomposition of Effects in Path Analysis , 1975 .
[53] J. Seckl,et al. Glucocorticoids and the ageing hippocampus , 2000, Journal of anatomy.