Data di Pubblicazione:
2023
Citazione:
(2023). The Role of Cognition in Divergent Thinking: Implications for Successful Aging [journal article - articolo]. In BRAIN SCIENCES. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/257509
Abstract:
Promoting active and successful aging has become crucial to improve quality of life in later adulthood and reduce the impact of cognitive decline. Increasing evidence suggested that
the ability to think creatively (e.g., via divergent thinking), similar to cognitive reserve, could
represent a beneficial factor against the negative effects of aging. However, there is still little evidence
investigating the relationships between divergent thinking, cognitive functions, and cognitive reserve
in late adulthood. The present study explored these relationships in a sample of 98 individuals
ranging from 61 to 88 years old (mean age: 72.44 ± 6.35). Results showed that visual, but not verbal,
divergent thinking was affected by aging. Interestingly, visual divergent thinking performance was
predicted by both the cognitive component of crystallized intelligence and cognitive reserve. Only
the crystallized component of intelligence was found to mediate the aging effect on visual divergent
thinking performance. These results suggest that in later adulthood a potential shift strategy to prior
knowledge and semantic components over executive and control components of cognition could
underlie a preserved ability to think divergently and, plausibly, creatively. Limitations of the study
and implications for successful aging are discussed.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1.01 Articoli/Saggi in rivista - Journal Articles/Essays
Elenco autori:
Colautti, Laura; Borsa, Virginia Maria; Fusi, Giulia; Crepaldi, Maura; Palmiero, Massimiliano; Garau, Francesca; Bonfiglio, Natale Salvatore; Gianni', Jessica; Rusconi, Maria Luisa; Penna, Maria Pietronilla; Rozzini, Luca; Antonietti, Alessandro
Link alla scheda completa:
Link al Full Text:
Pubblicato in: