Article

Within-person trial-to-trial variability precedes and predicts cognitive decline in old and very old age: Longitudinal data from the Berlin Aging Study

Details

Citation

Lovden M, Li S, Shing YL & Lindenberger U (2007) Within-person trial-to-trial variability precedes and predicts cognitive decline in old and very old age: Longitudinal data from the Berlin Aging Study. Neuropsychologia, 45 (12), pp. 2827-2838. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.05.005

Abstract
Neurocomputational modeling and empirical evidence suggest that losses in neuronal signaling fidelity cause senescent changes in behavior. We appliedstructural equation modelingto five-occasion 13-yearlongitudinal datafrom the Berlin Aging Study (n=447; age range at t1=70–102 years) to test whether trial-to-trial reaction time variability in perceptual speed (identical pictures) antecedes and signals longitudinal decline in levels of performance on perceptual speed (digit letter and identical pictures) and ideational fluency (category fluency). Higher trial-to-trial variability preceded and predicted greater cognitive decline in perceptual speed and ideational fluency. We conclude that trial-to-trial variability signals impending decline in cognitive performance, and that theories of neurocognitive aging need to postulate developmental cascades between senescent changes in variability and central tendency.

Keywords
Within-person variability; Inconsistency; Neuronal noise; Longitudinal change; Neurocognitive aging; Cognitive control

Journal
Neuropsychologia: Volume 45, Issue 12

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2007
Publication date online17/05/2007
Date accepted by journal07/05/2007
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/22244
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0028-3932