Social capital and aging brain health

Author(s):  
Nicole D. Anderson
Author(s):  
Michael M. Merzenich

This chapter reviews aging and the brain from an important, alternative, still-underappreciated scientific and medical perspective. It briefly describes the history of brain plasticity-related neuroscience, then describes change processes that shape our brains in ways that ultimately distinguish the typical struggling older versus peak-performing younger brain. It considers how and why processes that contribute to personal growth at a younger age are commonly thrown into reverse at an older age. It reviews the development of new brain science–based tools that appear to throw the “plasticity switch” for brain health back in a corrective and strengthening direction, where change processes again support the growth and the more reliable maintenance of physical and functional brain health. Finally, it summarizes how this translational science shall almost certainly evolve to enable a new, neuroscience-directed medical era of brain health management for our older-age populations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 156-156
Author(s):  
Jennifer Deal ◽  
Frank Lin ◽  
Bonnielin Swenor

Abstract Sensory impairment impacts over 55% of Americans aged 60 years or older and may have important downstream consequences for the cognitive health of older adults. This session will present evidence for a relationship between sensory impairment and accelerated cognitive decline, increased risk of incident dementia, and increased mental and physical fatigability from two observational cohort studies. Additionally, this session will investigate the possible nature of these relationships. It may be that sensory impairment is a marker of dementia-related pathological changes in the brain, with potential ramifications for risk prediction and stratification. Alternatively, sensory impairment may have a direct impact on the aging brain, a potential causal mechanism liking sensory impairment and brain health, with implications for disease prevention. As part of this session, we will present evidence for associations between central auditory processing, a potential risk marker, and brain volumes measured with structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and retinal vasculature density, as measured with optical coherence tomography. We will conclude by describing associations between age-related macular degeneration, a leading cause of blindness, and neurocognitive test performance and regional changes in brain atrophy and connectivity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (S10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel Carly Lazarus ◽  
Zack Rodman

Author(s):  
Loraine K. Obler

The focus of this article is on the study of bilingual and multilingual adults at the Howard Goodglass Aphasia Research Center and the Language in the Aging Brain Laboratory by Drs. Obler and Albert along with former students and colleagues. Summaries of studies examining research in healthy bilingual adults, healthy monolingual older adults, and monolingual and bilingual individuals with aphasia are presented.


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