1. The impact of retirement on executive functions and processing speed: findings from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging.
- Author
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Gosselin, Catherine and Boller, Benjamin
- Subjects
- *
COGNITIVE processing speed , *EXECUTIVE function , *EXECUTIVE retirement , *LONGITUDINAL method , *COGNITIVE aging - Abstract
We used data from the Comprehensive cohort of the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging to compare the cognitive performance of retirees and workers (n = 1442), 45–85 years of age at baseline. Speed processing and executive functioning were assessed using standardized assessment tools at baseline and at follow-up, measured 3 years later. Retirees and workers were matched for age, sex, and education using the nearest neighbor propensity score method with a caliper of 0.02. Mixed ANOVA and post hoc analyses were conducted separately for the English- and French-speaking samples. Results for the English-speaking sample showed a significant decline on both the Stroop and the Mental Alternation tasks for retirees compared to workers from baseline to follow-up. These results support previous cross-sectional studies that have demonstrated a negative effect of retirement on executive functioning. The absence of significant results in the French-speaking sample are discussed in terms of sample size and professional occupation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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