Aging, even when healthy, involves changes in cognitive functioning that can gradually affect the everyday activities and well-being of older people. Reading, which requires the integrity of several functions and their integration, is important to maintaining high cognitive and emotional stimulation over time. Our study aimed to investigate whether reading ability declines with aging. To explore also why reading would decline, we explored the changes in the performance of visual and attention tasks. A group of 58 neurologically healthy older people aged from 65 to 75 underwent neuropsychological assessment to investigate their global cognitive functioning, reading skills, crowding, and attention components. We found a decline in reading abilities as a function of aging (β = 0.34, p < 0.05). We did not find an increase in crowding or difficulties in visual acuity. Furthermore, we found no decline with age in tasks of simple reaction times, visuospatial attention, and other single components of attention. Interestingly, we instead found a worsening with age in the Symbol Digit Modalities Test (β = −0.26, p < 0.05), involving attention, working memory, and processing speed, which explains part of the reading decline. Our results suggest that task complexity is a fundamental aspect to account for aging changes.

Pegoraro, S., Facchin, A., Luchesa, F., Rolandi, E., Guaita, A., Arduino, L., et al. (2024). The Complexity of Reading Revealed by a Study with Healthy Older Adults. BRAIN SCIENCES, 14(3) [10.3390/brainsci14030230].

The Complexity of Reading Revealed by a Study with Healthy Older Adults

Pegoraro, S
Primo
;
Facchin, A
Secondo
;
Daini, R
Ultimo
2024

Abstract

Aging, even when healthy, involves changes in cognitive functioning that can gradually affect the everyday activities and well-being of older people. Reading, which requires the integrity of several functions and their integration, is important to maintaining high cognitive and emotional stimulation over time. Our study aimed to investigate whether reading ability declines with aging. To explore also why reading would decline, we explored the changes in the performance of visual and attention tasks. A group of 58 neurologically healthy older people aged from 65 to 75 underwent neuropsychological assessment to investigate their global cognitive functioning, reading skills, crowding, and attention components. We found a decline in reading abilities as a function of aging (β = 0.34, p < 0.05). We did not find an increase in crowding or difficulties in visual acuity. Furthermore, we found no decline with age in tasks of simple reaction times, visuospatial attention, and other single components of attention. Interestingly, we instead found a worsening with age in the Symbol Digit Modalities Test (β = −0.26, p < 0.05), involving attention, working memory, and processing speed, which explains part of the reading decline. Our results suggest that task complexity is a fundamental aspect to account for aging changes.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Reading; healthy aging; attention; crowding; neuropsychological assessment; mediation model
English
28-feb-2024
2024
14
3
230
open
Pegoraro, S., Facchin, A., Luchesa, F., Rolandi, E., Guaita, A., Arduino, L., et al. (2024). The Complexity of Reading Revealed by a Study with Healthy Older Adults. BRAIN SCIENCES, 14(3) [10.3390/brainsci14030230].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/461519
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