Aging Is Associated With Multidirectional Changes in Social Cognition: Findings From an Adult Life-Span Sample Ranging From 18 to 101 Years

Author:

Grainger Sarah A1,Crawford John D2,Riches Julia C3,Kochan Nicole A2,Chander Russell J2,Mather Karen A24ORCID,Sachdev Perminder S25ORCID,Henry Julie D1

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, The University of Queensland , Queensland , Australia

2. Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA), School of Psychiatry, The University of New South Wales , Sydney , Australia

3. The University of Sydney , Sydney , Australia

4. Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) , Sydney , Australia

5. Neuropsychiatric Institute, Princes of Wales Hospital , Sydney , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Normal adult aging is associated with changes in social cognition. Although 4 social cognitive domains have been identified (social perception, theory of mind [ToM], affective empathy, and social behavior), no study has tested all 4 domains concurrently in a life-span sample, limiting understanding of the relative magnitude of age-related changes across domains. This study addresses this gap by providing the first assessment of all 4 social cognitive domains in an adult life-span sample. Methods Three hundred and seventy-two participants ranging from 18 to 101 years of age took part in this study. Participants completed a testing battery that assessed social perception, ToM, affective empathy, and social behavior, as well as broader cognitive function and well-being. Results The results showed that adult aging is associated with multidirectional changes in social cognitive abilities, with ToM and social perception showing nonlinear decline across much of the life-span, and affective empathy and social behavior showing improvement. Age remained a significant predictor of all 4 social cognitive domains, even after accounting for broader cognitive function. Weak associations emerged between some of the social cognitive abilities and and indices of broader well-being. Discussion These findings provide novel and important evidence that normative aging is associated with both gains and losses in social cognition that occur at distinct points of the adult life-span, and that are at least partially independent of general age-related cognitive decline.

Funder

Australian Research Council

National Health and Medical Research Council

University of New South Wales

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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