The influence of education and occupational complexity in the cognitive performance of older adults with mild cognitive impairment

La influencia de la educación y la complejidad laboral en el desempeño cognitivo de adultos mayores con deterioro cognitivo leve

A influência da educação e da complexidade laboral no desempenho cognitivo de idosos com comprometimento cognitivo leve

Feldberg, Carolina - Stefani, Dorina - Tartaglini, María Florencia - Hermida , Paula Daniela - Moya García , Lydia - Somale, Verónica - Allegri, Ricardo
Detalles Bibliográficos
2020
older adults
occupational complexity
mild cognitive impairment
education
cognitive performance
adultos mayores
complejidad laboral
deterioro cognitivo leve
educación
rendimiento cognitivo
idosos
complexidade laboral
declínio cognitivo leve
educação
desempenho cognitivo
Español
Universidad Católica del Uruguay
LIBERI
https://revistas.ucu.edu.uy/index.php/cienciaspsicologicas/article/view/2194
Acceso abierto
Resumen:
Sumario:The objective of this paper is to assess the relative importance of education and occupational complexity to determine the cognitive performance on patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). 80 patients with MCI were assessed using the following instruments: questionnaire of sociodemogrhapical data, questionnaire on attainment of occupation, and an extended neuropsychological battery. Abilities tested were: logical memory (Signoret Memory Battery, TAVEC), attention (Digit span, TMTA), language (Vocabulary WAIS III, Boston Naming Test, Verbal Fluency), executive functions (TMTB, Analogies WAIS III, Matrix reasoning WAIS III) and visuoconstruction (Block design WAIS III). Results show that occupational complexity is more relevant than education for cognition of vocabulary, to achieve cognitive flexibility and to obtain visuoconstructive abilities. Education is more important for abstract reasoning and sustained attention. Occupational complexity and education have a unique and important role in the maintenance of cognitive abilities, working as buffers for cognitive impairment during aging.