The roles of study setting, response bias, and personality in subjective memory complaints of cognitively normal older adults

Author:

Goldberg Sarah M.ORCID,Lopez Oscar L.,Cohen Ann D.,Klunk William E.,Aizenstein Howard A.,Mizuno Akiko,Snitz Beth E.

Abstract

ABSTRACTObjectives:This study investigated subjective memory complaints in older adults and the roles of setting, response bias, and personality.Design:Cognitively normal older adults from two settings completed questionnaires measuring memory complaints, response bias, and personality.Settings:(A) Neuroimaging study with community-based recruitment and (B) academic memory clinic.Participants:Cognitively normal older adults who (A) volunteer for research (N = 92) or (B) self-referred to a memory clinic (N = 20).Measurements:Neuropsychological evaluation and adjudication of normal cognitive status were done by the neuroimaging study or memory clinic. This study administered self-reports of subjective memory complaints, response bias, five-factor personality, and depressive symptoms. Primary group differences were examined with secondary sensitivity analyses to control for sex, age, and education differences.Results:There was no significant difference in over-reporting response bias between study settings. Under-reporting response bias was higher in volunteers. Cognitive complaints were associated with response bias for two cognitive complaint measures. Neuroticism was positively associated with over-reporting in evaluation-seekers and negatively associated with under-reporting in volunteers. The relationship was reversed for Extraversion. Under-reporting bias was positively correlated with Agreeableness and Conscientiousness in volunteers.Conclusion:Evaluation-seekers do not show bias toward over-reporting symptoms compared to volunteers. Under-reporting response bias may be important to consider when screening for memory impairment in non-help-seeking settings. The Memory Functioning Questionnaire was less sensitive to reporting biases. Over-reporting may be a facet of higher Neuroticism. Findings help elucidate psychological influences on self-perceived cognitive decline and help seeking in aging and may inform different strategies for assessment by setting.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology

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