Study Says Busy People Have Improved Cognitive Function In Old Age
Busy people may have better-functioning brains in old age than those who are less busy, scientists have suggested. A healthily busy lifestyle is associated with improved cognitive function, according to The Dallas Lifespan Brain Study found. Particularly when it comes to working memory, reasoning and vocabulary.
However, the scientists were not able to say if the heightened brain function was caused by being busy, or vice versa.
A total of 330 volunteers aged between 50 and 89 filled in questionnaires for the project. Published in the journal Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience. The volunteers also completed a series of neurological and psychological tests which measured their cognitive performance.
Denise Park, the director of the Dallas Lifespan Brain Study, stated surprise at how little research had been carried out on the subject. Considering that being too busy “seems to be a fact of modern life for so many”.
While the research was not affected by an individual’s level of education and age. Ms Park said that a link had been discovered between busy lifestyles and superior processing speed of the brain, working memory, reasoning and vocabulary.
In particular, there was a strong association between busyness and memory – specifically, the ability to remember certain events in the past.
Sara Festini, lead author of the study, said: “We show that people who report greater levels of daily busyness tend to have better cognition, especially with regard to memory for recently learned information.”
However
Results also raised a larger question…. Whether being busy improves cognitive function or if people with heightened neurological characteristics simply tend to be busier people?
The researchers hypothesized another possibility:
That busier people have more opportunities to learn through the wider variety of situations they find themselves in. In turn stimulates cognitive function.
“Living a busy lifestyle appears beneficial for mental function… Although additional experimental work is needed to determine if manipulations of busyness have the same effect,” said Dr Festini.
While being overly busy can lead to conditions like chronic stress, experts have supported the claim that a healthy level of busyness can also be important. Doctors often instruct patients with depression to keep busy to try to distract themselves from their condition.
Clinical psychotherapist Dr Nikki Webber told Medical Daily: “Isolation is a leading contributing factor to depression and leading a busy lifestyle can offer more opportunities to connect to others… People underestimate the need for.”
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