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Do clever brains age more slowly? Further exploration of a nun result.

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Do clever brains age more slowly? Further exploration of a nun result. / Rabbitt, P.; Chetwynd, A.; McInnes, L.
In: British Journal of Psychology, Vol. 94, No. 1, 02.2003, p. 63-71.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Rabbitt, P, Chetwynd, A & McInnes, L 2003, 'Do clever brains age more slowly? Further exploration of a nun result.', British Journal of Psychology, vol. 94, no. 1, pp. 63-71. https://doi.org/10.1348/000712603762842101

APA

Vancouver

Rabbitt P, Chetwynd A, McInnes L. Do clever brains age more slowly? Further exploration of a nun result. British Journal of Psychology. 2003 Feb;94(1):63-71. doi: 10.1348/000712603762842101

Author

Rabbitt, P. ; Chetwynd, A. ; McInnes, L. / Do clever brains age more slowly? Further exploration of a nun result. In: British Journal of Psychology. 2003 ; Vol. 94, No. 1. pp. 63-71.

Bibtex

@article{6066ee3d0c1d4f2886b5c81da9cf47a9,
title = "Do clever brains age more slowly? Further exploration of a nun result.",
abstract = "Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that individuals who have higher levels of mental ability in youth experience a slower cognitive decline as they grow old. In a sample of 3,263 Newcastle residents, average scores on a vocabulary test (Raven's 1965 'Mill Hill A') did not vary, while average scores on a test of fluid mental ability (the Heim, 1970, AH 4 (1) group intelligence test) sharply declined with age from 49 to 92 years. In young adults, Mill Hill A scores are good proxies for AH 4 (1) scores. This relationship allowed individuals' youthful AH 4 (1) test scores to be estimated from their current, unchanged, Mill Hill A scores so that age-related changes in AH 4 test scores over the adult life-span could be estimated and compared between high and low ability groups, men and women, and individuals of different levels of socio-economic advantage. The cross-sectional estimated rate of age-related decline in general mental ability was found to be the same for people of all levels of ability and socio-economic advantage, and not to differ between men and women.",
author = "P. Rabbitt and A. Chetwynd and L. McInnes",
year = "2003",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1348/000712603762842101",
language = "English",
volume = "94",
pages = "63--71",
journal = "British Journal of Psychology",
issn = "0007-1269",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Do clever brains age more slowly? Further exploration of a nun result.

AU - Rabbitt, P.

AU - Chetwynd, A.

AU - McInnes, L.

PY - 2003/2

Y1 - 2003/2

N2 - Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that individuals who have higher levels of mental ability in youth experience a slower cognitive decline as they grow old. In a sample of 3,263 Newcastle residents, average scores on a vocabulary test (Raven's 1965 'Mill Hill A') did not vary, while average scores on a test of fluid mental ability (the Heim, 1970, AH 4 (1) group intelligence test) sharply declined with age from 49 to 92 years. In young adults, Mill Hill A scores are good proxies for AH 4 (1) scores. This relationship allowed individuals' youthful AH 4 (1) test scores to be estimated from their current, unchanged, Mill Hill A scores so that age-related changes in AH 4 test scores over the adult life-span could be estimated and compared between high and low ability groups, men and women, and individuals of different levels of socio-economic advantage. The cross-sectional estimated rate of age-related decline in general mental ability was found to be the same for people of all levels of ability and socio-economic advantage, and not to differ between men and women.

AB - Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that individuals who have higher levels of mental ability in youth experience a slower cognitive decline as they grow old. In a sample of 3,263 Newcastle residents, average scores on a vocabulary test (Raven's 1965 'Mill Hill A') did not vary, while average scores on a test of fluid mental ability (the Heim, 1970, AH 4 (1) group intelligence test) sharply declined with age from 49 to 92 years. In young adults, Mill Hill A scores are good proxies for AH 4 (1) scores. This relationship allowed individuals' youthful AH 4 (1) test scores to be estimated from their current, unchanged, Mill Hill A scores so that age-related changes in AH 4 test scores over the adult life-span could be estimated and compared between high and low ability groups, men and women, and individuals of different levels of socio-economic advantage. The cross-sectional estimated rate of age-related decline in general mental ability was found to be the same for people of all levels of ability and socio-economic advantage, and not to differ between men and women.

U2 - 10.1348/000712603762842101

DO - 10.1348/000712603762842101

M3 - Journal article

VL - 94

SP - 63

EP - 71

JO - British Journal of Psychology

JF - British Journal of Psychology

SN - 0007-1269

IS - 1

ER -