Skip to main content

Brain Health Across the Life Span / Search Inside This Book
Return to Search Inside This Book results

404 matches found for How People Learn Brain,Mind,Experience,and School Expanded Edition. in 6 Brain Health in the Social Context

Select a page to see where your word(s) or phrase(s) are located in the OpenBook. Excerpts from the chapter provide context.


In the middle of page 81...
...6Brain Health in the Social Context ...
At the bottom of page 81...
...It has been posited that there are three different types of connections in an individual: intimate connections, relational connections, and collective connections. Further study is warranted to understand the relationships between those connections (or lack thereof) and loneliness. (...
At the bottom of page 81...
...Research on brain health cannot be conducted using convenience samples, which proliferates in research on older adult brain health. Selection bias is prevalent in studies that use clinic-based or convenience samples, in which participants are recruited from clinics that ...
At the bottom of page 81...
...Brain health disparities research must measure life-course individual or contextual factors, such as social determinants of health or the social exposome, ... well to determine the relative contributions of bio-psycho-behavioral-social factors to disease or interactions. Experts in quantifying brain health have not traditionally focused on social determinants of health across the life course. As a result, measurements of social determinants are ... lacking even in studies that have exquisite measurements of brain health ...
In the middle of page 82...
...outcomes. Variables related to the social determinants of health—including childhood exposures and administrative policies in educational systems—are crucial for understanding trajectories of brain health. Understanding the neuropathological ...
In the middle of page 82...
... earlier life-course studies to incorporate those types of measures. Therefore, those measures will be valuable for long-term studies of aging and brain health. (Lis Nielsen) ...
In the middle of page 82...
...It is a future research challenge to develop harmonized measures, both of risk factors and of brain health outcomes; these are critical for combining cohorts, synthesizing research, and accelerating knowledge. (Jennifer Manly) ...
At the bottom of page 82...
...Brain health can be thought about as (1) a person’s accumulative reserve, which sets the intercept or starting point, and (2) the degree to which a person is affected by adversities, such as stress or the onset of illness. These adversities are likely to be related and ...
At the bottom of page 82...
...This chapter summarizes the workshop session on brain health in the social context, particularly with respect to both emotions and social disparities. Presenters and panelists looked at how an individual’s social context affects his or her brain health and resilience, how ... social factors are important for understanding and predicting brain health, and how those factors are measured and validated. Stephanie Cacioppo, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral neuroscience and assistant professor at the Grossman Institute for ... at the University of Chicago, provided an overview of how the brain forms, maintains, and restores healthy relationships. Gregory Samanez-Larkin, assistant professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University, examined motivation, ... , and decision making in everyday life. Life-course causes of later-life inequalities in brain health were explored by Jennifer Manly, professor of ...
In the middle of page 83...
... FROM ME TO WE: HOW THE BRAIN FORMS, MAINTAINS, AND RESTORES HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS...
In the middle of page 83...
... Cacioppo described the improvement of brain health and social resilience as among the most important challenges facing contemporary science. When a 1978 report by the U.S. President’s Commission on ... an increasing amount of attention, with the number of scientific papers published per year on loneliness increasing by roughly tenfold (Cacioppo and Cacioppo, 2018a). Cacioppo described what the former Surgeon General of the United States, Vivek Murthy, described as the loneliness epidemic....
In the middle of page 83...
... People are living longer than ever before, with the rise of the Internet transforming how people work, play, search, shop, study, communicate, and relate to one another. People are increasingly connected digitally, but social media do not necessarily protect them from loneliness or perceived ... of loneliness appears to be rising, from an estimated 11–17 percent of adults in the 1970s to more than 40 percent of adults middle-aged and older in recent years (Edmondson, 2010; Peplau et al., 1979; Perissinotto et al., 2012)....
At the bottom of page 83...
... Defining and Measuring Loneliness...
At the bottom of page 83...
... with social resilience in publications. Social resilience is inherently a multilevel construct—revealed by capacities of individuals and also groups—to foster, engage in, and sustain positive social relationships and to endure and recover from social stressors and social ... (Cacioppo et al., 2011). The premise underlying this work on loneliness and social resilience is that the brain is the main “social organ.” It is a key organ for forming, monitoring, and maintaining healthy ... with others as well as for regulating physiological processes relevant to morbidity and mortality. The brain helps organize a person’s social structures and social behaviors; it also regulates the social processes that determine ... and longevity (Cacioppo and Cacioppo, 2018a)....
At the bottom of page 83...
... People often think about humans as being unique compared to other species and think of themselves as unique and independent relative to those around them. Although individuals may appear to be distinct and independent, with no forces binding them together, ...
In the middle of page 84...
... fact have more similarities than differences. Humans are a social species that is wired to form social connections and maintain those connections across the life span (Cacioppo and Cacioppo, 2012). The brain is primarily responsible for forming, monitoring, and ... those salutary connections with others. To illustrate the difference between objective and subjective isolation, Cacioppo used the example of how the same objective social interaction or relationship (e.g., with a sibling or a spouse) can ... perceived either as caring and protective or as threatening and isolating. A person can feel “lonely in a crowd” when public speaking, for instance, while a person can feel extremely connected while ... alone just by thinking about loved ones. Thus, loneliness can be defined as perceived social isolation: a discrepancy between current and expected social relationships with a significant other....
In the middle of page 84...
... Several different scales can be used to measure loneliness, but three main items have been evaluated as consistently reliable measures (Cacioppo and Cacioppo, 2018a)....
In the middle of page 84...
... How often do you feel that you lack companionship?...
In the middle of page 84...
... How often do you feel left out?...
At the bottom of page 84...
... How often do you feel isolated from others?...
At the bottom of page 84...
... Effect of Loneliness on Physical and Mental Health...
At the bottom of page 84...
... As the prevalence of loneliness rises, more evidence is accruing that loneliness is a major risk factor for poor physical and mental health outcomes (Cacioppo and Cacioppo, 2018a). For instance, the odds ratio for dying earlier from loneliness has been shown to be much ... percent) (Holt-Lunstad et al., 2010). Studies in animals or humans demonstrate the effect of loneliness or lack of social connection on both physical and mental health, including the activation of the stress response, increases in inflammatory mechanisms, and increases in cell deaths in specific brain ... whether the person is rejected by a stranger or a significant other. All the activated brain areas were in the specific networks involved in emotions and in expectations by relation (Cacioppo et al., 2013). When a person feels lonely, a different set of brain areas activates or deactivates in the ... brain networks instead: areas that are important for empathy, compassion, perspective taking, and being in synchrony with others (Cacioppo et al., 2014)....
In the middle of page 85...
... to social within a year; it has a brain that is about 30 percent larger when it is social than when it is nonsocial (Burrows et al., 2011; Ott and Rogers, 2010; Rogers and Ott, 2015). Studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of people with different social network sizes have ... lonely individuals (Cacioppo et al., 2014). Cacioppo surmised that these individuals may have a hypervigilance to social threat or potential danger, and thus a hyperactivation in areas of the brain that are important for perspective taking, empathizing, or connecting with others....
At the bottom of page 85...
... It has long been understood that brain health and survival depend on our collective abilities, not our individual might, said Cacioppo. Decades of research in social psychology shows that happy ... have myriad beneficial effects on health through behavioral, cardiovascular, neuroendocrine, immune system, and cognitive pathways. People who are married have fewer physical problems, a better survival rate for some illnesses, and a lower mortality rate ( ... , 2018; Goodwin et al., 1987; Lillard et al., 1995; Murphy et al., 1997; Waite and Lehrer, 2003). Throughout history, humans have survived and prospered by bonding together in couples, families, and tribes—to provide companionship, mutual protection, and aid. However, marital status is ...
At the bottom of page 85...
...; is challenging, but it could be informed by studies of different species. For instance, adult female baboons (>5 years of age) who form stronger and more stable social bonds with other females live significantly longer than females who form weaker and less stable relationships (Silk et al., 2010). ... study tested two species, monogamous titi monkeys and nonmonogamous squirrel monkeys (Mendoza and Mason, 1986). When researchers removed one of the significant monkeys from a group of polygamous monkeys, they observed no increase in cortisol in ...
In the middle of page 86...
... remaining monkeys, presumably because the group could find another partner. When the researchers removed the offspring, however, they observed a large increase in plasma cortisol after 1 hour of separation. The opposite was found in the monogamous titi monkeys. When ...
In the middle of page 86...
... Cacioppo suggested that evolutionary heritage has shaped the human brain and biology to be inclined toward certain ways of feeling, thinking, and acting toward significant others. For instance, a variety of biological mechanisms have evolved that capitalize on aversive signals to motivate ... , loneliness is like a biological signal in that the aversiveness of loneliness serves as a biological warning signal analogous to hunger, thirst, and pain. It motivates attention and the repair or replacement of deficiencies in salutary relationships. In other words, it signals that something is ... with a person’s “social body,” so the person needs to reconnect with others in order to survive (Cacioppo and Cacioppo, 2014, 2018b; Cacioppo and Patrick, 2008; Cacioppo et al., 2000, 2006)....
At the bottom of page 86...
... Multiple pathways link loneliness to morbidity and mortality, said Cacioppo. Although the deleterious effects of each pathway may be limited, their cumulative effects over time aggregate to produce ... damage to health and well-being. Interventions in these pathways have the potential to mitigate the deleterious effects of loneliness. She identified multiple pathways ... to loneliness (Cacioppo and Cacioppo, 2018b; see Table 6-1). Loneliness causes, not just correlates with, increases in vascular resistance and blood pressure. When controlling for all standard predictors or stressors, loneliness can predict blood pressure increases in both older and younger ... (Hawkley et al., 2010b). Loneliness decreases sleep quality through micro-awakenings and poor sleep efficiency (Cacioppo et al., 2002a) and is associated with large increases in the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis stress response; it can predict not only cortisone ...
At the bottom of page 86...
... Loneliness is associated with increases in depressive symptomatology1 as well as in prepotent responding, or impassivity. People who feel lonely...
At the bottom of page 86...
... lonely feels not only sad, but in danger. Animal studies demonstrate that animals separated from their significant other for at least 2 weeks start showing signs of depressive symptomatology as well....
At the top of page 87...
... TABLE 6-1 Pathways Associated with Loneliness in Human and Animal Models...
At the top of page 87...
... Human Experimental and/or Longitudinal Research...
In the middle of page 87...
... Decreased slow wave sleep and homeostatic rebound (Kaushal et al., 2012)...
In the middle of page 87...
... Elevated vascular resistance and blood pressure (Hawkley et al., 2010b)...
In the middle of page 87...
... Up-regulation of gene expression for inflammatory biology and down-regulation of antiviral gene expression (Cole et al., 2007, 2011, 2015)...
In the middle of page 87...
... Up-regulation of gene expression for inflammatory biology and down-regulation of antiviral gene expression (Cole et al., 2015)...
At the bottom of page 87...
... Increased inflammation (e.g., peripheral IL-6 and IL-beta) (Jaremka et al., 2013)...
At the bottom of page 87...
... Increased impulsive responding, hostility, and defensiveness...
At the bottom of page 87...
... Increased prepotent responding and increased aggressiveness (Grippo et al., 2014; Matsumoto et al., 2012; Nin et al., 2011)...
At the bottom of page 87...
... Increased depression, anxiety, and social withdrawal (Cacioppo et al., 2010)...
At the bottom of page 87...
... Increased depression, anxiety, and social withdrawal (Matsumoto et al., 2012; Nin et al., 2011)...
At the bottom of page 87...
... SOURCE: Adapted from table presented by Stephanie Cacioppo at the workshop Brain Health Across the Life Span on September 25, 2019....
At the bottom of page 87...
... tend to gamble more, drink more, and consume more fat every day. In line with this impassivity, loneliness also increases suicide rates and ideation. Loneliness also increases defensiveness and self-centeredness. fMRI studies suggest that the latter is mostly due to self-preservation ... and self-survival principles (Cacioppo et al., 2009).2 Lonely individuals tend to show deactivations of the reward systems in response to positive social ...
At the bottom of page 87...
... cortex in response to negative social stimuli versus nonsocial stimuli, as well as hyperactivations of temporoparietal junctions on both sides of the brain....
In the middle of page 88...
... Brain Dynamics of Loneliness...
In the middle of page 88...
... Cacioppo presented data from studies on the brain dynamics of loneliness that looked at when and how fast the associated brain regions are activated (Cacioppo et al., 2015a, 2016). For example, lonely participants were able to differentiate a ... of resting-state fMRI data. In lonely individuals, investigators observed hyperactivation in the network of alertness (the cingulo-opercular network) and hyperconnectedness in the supramarginal gyrus network, which is associated with taking perspective of other relationships....
At the bottom of page 88...
... Together, the behavioral, neuroimaging, and electroencephalographic (EEG) data suggest that there is a paradoxical element to loneliness. Lonely people feel isolated and receive the biological ... that they need to approach and connect with others to survive. They have this huge motivation to connect, but at the same time, their brains are hyperalert for potential threats to ... with, then behavioral confirmation processes lead to social withdrawal. Going forward, the temporal dynamics for the operation of loneliness and for each specific pathway need to be better understood. Another research question is to look at whether loneliness is associated with many or all of ... pathways in everyone, or if it is associated with different pathways or subsets of pathways across people and social contexts....
At the bottom of page 88...
... Lis Nielsen, chief of the Individual Behavioral Processes Branch of the Division of Behavioral and Social Research at the National Institute on Aging (NIA), remarked that research on loneliness is garnering increased public attention and asked ... does not necessarily help as much as other interventions. This is in line with social evolutionary theories that survival depends on mutual aid and protection that is a two-way street of exchanging information and support. Group interventions that bring together people who are lonely are also not ... want to go to the meetings, but when they do, they find foes rather than friends. They misinterpret what people are saying, they feel defensiveness, and then they play the blame game. Participants often...
In the middle of page 89...
... than positive ones, she added. Cognitive behavioral therapeutic interventions tend to be more oriented toward addressing the functions of the social brain network....
At the bottom of page 89...
... Deanna Barch, chair and professor of psychological and brain sciences, professor of radiology, and Gregory B. Couch Professor of Psychiatry at Washington University in St. Louis, asked Cacioppo to elaborate on the nature of loneliness—for ... , but a modulation of certain brain areas depending on mind state or mood. Neurotic people tend to be less responsive to some loneliness interventions and less open to being helped with their loneliness. However, she suggested that loneliness is more like a state than a trait, given that a person can go ... and out of it so easily....
At the bottom of page 89...
... Damien Fair, associate professor of behavioral neuroscience, associate professor of psychiatry, and associate scientist at the Advanced Imaging Research Center at the Oregon Health & Science University, commented that it is difficult to define ... Cacioppo discussed in the context of loneliness might be potential targets for brain health writ large, such as quality of life, life expectancy, and the development of psychopathologies. After defining loneliness as a risk factor, the researchers identified brain changes in the animal models, ... changes, and behavioral changes related to this risk factor. Fair suggested that the next question is to differentiate between (1) the changes that are related ... to loneliness or causative of loneliness, and (2) the changes that make one resilient to the risk factor of loneliness. Cacioppo said that longitudinal studies have controlled for the other ... , including genetic expressions, and found that sensitivity to social rejection (not loneliness per se) is heritable 30–35 percent of the time. This sensitivity can be a trigger to ... of the other factors. Evidence also shows that constellations of factors like cortisol, sleep salubrity, and the HPA axis drive increases in the effect of loneliness....
At the bottom of page 89...
... domain for prediction purposes. Cacioppo responded that chronic loneliness lasts for at least 2 to 4 weeks; studies should be conducted to understand the individual-level dynamics of loneliness at play during this period. She remarked that loneliness does not discriminate—it touches every ... , every ethnicity, and every context. It has been posited that there are three different types of connections in an individual: intimate connections, relational connections,...
In the middle of page 90...
... and collective connections. Further study is warranted to understand the relationships between those connections (or lack thereof) and loneliness. Early research suggests that the collective connections do not move as fast as the intimate ones or the relational ones; collective ...
In the middle of page 90...
... a sense that you belong to someone even if you feel lonely every other day, the fact that you belong to a group that is bigger than yourself—and you have a bigger purpose in life—that would be really helpful for you to feel less lonely on a daily basis....
In the middle of page 90...
... MOTIVATION, COGNITION, AND DECISION MAKING IN EVERYDAY LIFE...
At the bottom of page 90...
... focused on the relatively linear declines associated with aging in terms of fluid cognitive deficits, attention, inhibiting interference, memory, and so forth. However, evidence that older adults experience more positive emotions and fewer negative emotions in daily life—and report being ...
At the bottom of page 90...
... Longitudinal evidence from positron emission tomography (PET) and fMRI studies provides insight into the functional and structural changes in the brain that account for age-related impairments in cognition. For example, this evidence suggests that changes in episodic ... , which would typically be ascribed to the medial temporal lobes, seem to be related more strongly to gradual structural and functional decline causing gross losses in the frontal cortex. However, the neurobiological bases of motivational and emotional health improvements ... not yet well understood. Even today, some researchers maintain a dualistic position with respect to biology and motivation—meaning, that findings about age differences in cognition are either attributable to biological changes or to motivational changes, ... . This highlights the need for research on how motivational systems may change with age in ways that maintain the stability of emotional health and may even drive improvements....
At the bottom of page 90...
... To help address this research gap, Samanez-Larkin’s group looks at how individual and age differences in motivation and cognition influence decision making across the life span. Decision making is a capacity that...
In the middle of page 91...
... recruits a broad range of interacting psychological processes and neurobiological systems. Their early research found that older adults tend to perform the same or better as younger adults in some decision tasks&#...
In the middle of page 91...
... age. In fact, subsequent studies showed that giving participants the dopamine precursor levodopa could improve reinforcement learning in older adults and normalize that value-based signal in the prefrontal cortex. This highlights the important role of dopamine in reinforcement learning and suggests ...
In the middle of page 91...
... reward magnitude in the medial prefrontal cortex. This suggests that the older adults were less likely to factor the delay into their decision making and that the value signal seen in older adults is mostly a function of the reward’s magnitude; behaviorally, the time delay does not appear to ...
At the bottom of page 91...
...’s group maintained that the findings are evidence for preservation with age. They speculated that older adults have more lived experience and thus understand that a delayed large reward will feel just as good or better than an immediate small reward. Another research group came to the ...
At the bottom of page 91...
... 3 Typically, reinforcement learning tasks requiring the participant to make a choice, receive feedback, and then make a new choice based on the evidence provided thus far....
In the middle of page 92...
... signaling in older adults. Samanez-Larkin’s group hypothesized that older adults tend to perform worse on reinforcement learning tasks and the same or better on choice-based decision tasks for the same reason: they are more willing to tolerate delays due to decline of dopamine with age ... a consequent global motivational deficit. In other words, older people find it harder to get excited and motivated. This hypothesis is counter to findings about emotional experience and age-related social preferences conducted by Carstensen and other ...
In the middle of page 92...
... Time Horizons and Goals Shift with Age...
At the bottom of page 92...
... Socioemotional selectivity theory holds that time horizons change with age. As people age, the awareness that time is limited influences their goals and changes their motivation. Some of the early evidence about age-related changes in motivation came from simple social partner preference studies, in ... recently read, with a recent acquaintance with whom the person seems to have much in common, or with a close friend or family member (Carstensen and Fredrickson, 1998; Fredrickson and Carstensen, 1990; Fung et al., 1999)....
At the bottom of page 92...
... Younger people are more likely to choose the author or recent acquaintance and are somewhat indifferent in their preference for the three options. Older adults tend to be less indifferent than younger people and demonstrate a ... preference for the close social partner, who is associated with known usefulness and positive value. Based on this evidence, investigators hypothesized that the age effects on behavior, and potentially on brain function, depend on the ...
At the bottom of page 92...
...;s group has explored age-related differences in how the type of reward relates to motivation. One study hypothesized that age effects on behavior and frontostriatal function would depend on the goal relevance of rewards. The study used three versions of the intertemporal choice task (Seaman et al., ... ): (1) a standard version of the task, in which participants chose between an immediate smaller monetary reward and a delayed larger monetary reward; (2) a social version of the task, in which the reward magnitude was the length of time spent with a close...
In the middle of page 93...
...social partner; and (3) a health version of the task, in which the reward magnitude was the dosage of a hypothetical drug that would improve organ function as well as ... and mental health. Figure 6-1 shows that in the monetary reward task, older people are statistically as likely to choose the immediate option as younger ... . However, in the social and health reward tasks, older adults are more likely to take the smaller immediate reward than younger people.4 ...
In the middle of page 93...
...These findings warrant a behavioral explanation, because if low dopamine levels reduce the motivation for immediate reward in older people, they can apparently still become excited for immediate rewards behaviorally. Another study looked at subjective value signals during three decision-...
In the middle of page 93...
...;s individual preferences were taken into account based on their behavioral choices, in order to look at the representation of subjective usefulness and subjective value. In this study, age differences were not observed in the medial prefrontal cortex; the adults of all ages similarly represented ...
At the bottom of page 93...
...FIGURE 6-1 Older adults want immediate social and health rewards.SOURCES: As presented by Gregory Samanez-Larkin at the workshop Brain Health Across the Life Span on September 25, 2019; adapted from ...
At the bottom of page 93...
... noted that in other studies, the positive effect is generally not seen in the financial reward task. He posited that because the financial, social, and health tasks were intermixed in this study, perhaps it oriented the older adults’ future thinking in such a way that they are more focused on ...
In the middle of page 94...
... decline, Samanez-Larkin’s group conducted a meta-analysis of different components of the dopamine system. After analyzing three decades of PET and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging studies of adult age differences in the dopamine system, researchers found very strong ... in dopamine transporters across both classes of dopamine receptors (i.e., D1-like and D2-like receptors). However, they did not find significant age difference in dopamine synthesis capacity, which is a measure of how well dopamine can ... packaged and prepared for release (Karrer et al., 2017). This suggests that older adults are able to produce dopamine and package it relatively well, but the receptor differences limit the extent to which that dopamine can affect signaling. Signal transmission may be ...
In the middle of page 94...
... Evidence for Motivational Brain Health...
At the bottom of page 94...
... of the aging dopamine system was interesting, but the underlying processes were still unclear, given the very strong age correlations with D2-like and D1-like receptors. The researchers posited that perhaps the motivational effects and functional value signals in the medial prefrontal cortex—a ... dopamine system as people age. In the meta-analysis, the reported statistics yielded very large regions of interest, including the prefrontal cortex and all of the striatum. To address this, Samanez-Larkin’s group used higher-resolution data from 132 adults ranging in age from 20 to 85 years to ... more closely at the striatum and certain cortical regions (Seaman et al., 2019). They parsed up frontal cortex into all the sub gyri, the striatum into all the striatal subregions, ... the mediotemporal lobe into subregions, and then plotted the percentage differences per decade in D2-like-receptor availability. The analysis showed substantial regional variation in the ...
In the middle of page 95...
... in the decline of D2-like receptors with aging.NOTE: CI = confidence interval.SOURCES: As presented by Gregory Samanez-Larkin at the workshop Brain Health Across the Life Span on September 25, 2019; adapted from Seaman et al., 2019. ...
At the bottom of page 95...
...cortex, while the weakest effects (or no effects) were seen in the ventral striatum and pallidum. ...
At the bottom of page 95...
... relatively preserved; D2-like receptors are also preserved in certain regions of the brain. It appears that dopamine production, postsynaptic action, and signal transmission are maintained with age in certain subcomponents of these circuits. Perhaps some subparts of the circuits are actually working ... well and their functions are dopamine mediated, which would affect fMRI evidence for preserved signaling. This could also be caused by the preservation of ... that evidence for motivational brain health—rather than decline—is the meaningful evidence that is emerging from this fMRI, behavioral, and PET research. ...
At the bottom of page 95...
...Samanez-Larkin concluded by describing some of his laboratory’s future research directions. They have ongoing fMRI studies on anticipation and the experience of social versus health rewards, as well as plans ...
In the middle of page 96...
... more naturalistic stimuli, the paradigms are still relatively basic—positive social rewards, negative social rewards, or social incentives (Holland et al., 2019). They are also looking at how these reward-type differences influence function, as well as how those factors are related to differences ...
At the bottom of page 96...
... that his laboratory recently completed a meta-analysis on the age effects of serotonin; there appears to be no preservation of the serotonin system and a relatively clear decline with age. Nielsen asked if there is any evidence that individual differences in the dopamine system are a function of life-...
At the bottom of page 96...
... the type of variance that is seen in these data: one is the real signal—that is, the real variability with regard to a given measurement—and the other is noise. The two may need to be teased apart to understand what it means to be resilient. Samanez-Larkin responded by acknowledging the ... of these cross-sectional data. Very little longitudinal PET data are available, and some of the changes they are investigating take decades to become apparent. It might be possible to identify lifestyle factors and create ... measures, but there is no earlier time point to relate the data to; the participants could simply have wildly different intercepts and the same rates of age-related receptor loss. In terms of noisy data in general, Samanez-Larkin’s group is interested in brain signal ... have analyzed functional neural signal variability in fMRI data to ascertain how volatile the brain signal is, how that variability changes with age, and how it is related to decision making; they are also looking at whether fMRI signal variability is related to differences in dopamine receptors....
In the middle of page 97...
... LIFE-COURSE CAUSES OF LATER-LIFE INEQUALITIES IN BRAIN HEALTH...
In the middle of page 97...
... Manly presented on life-course causes of inequalities and disparities in brain health later in life. She began with a review of challenges faced in researching brain health disparities. First, this research ... of social determinants are often lacking even in studies that have exquisite measurements of brain health outcomes. This has hampered discovery and acceleration in the field of brain health disparities....
In the middle of page 97...
... A third challenge is the difficulty in determining the degree of bias in estimates of early-life or life-course factors and how they relate to brain health. Observational research will not have value unless it is used to develop targeted interventions using accurate ... . However, it is difficult to determine bias if the target or reference population has not been defined, thus threatening external and internal validity. The fourth challenge is to develop harmonized measures,6 both of risk factors and of brain health outcomes; these are critical for ... cohorts, synthesizing research, and accelerating knowledge....
At the bottom of page 97...
... Evidence for Disparities in Later-Life Brain Health and Resilience...
At the bottom of page 97...
... Manly provided an overview of available evidence for disparities in brain health and in aging, as well as some of the methodological challenges in research and some of the identified mechanisms that could help to explain these ... health. The Washington Heights–Inwood Columbia Aging Project (WHICAP) longitudinal study in Northern Manhattan found that African Americans and Caribbean Hispanics are more likely to develop incident Alzheimer’s disease over time (Tang et al., 2001). These disparities persist even after ...
At the bottom of page 97...
... 6 Harmonized measures are measures that are standard across research groups and fields. Harmonized measures may avoid the problem of duplicative or overlapping research, as well as allowing larger studies to be conducted with ... power to observe subtle phenomena related to brain health and resilience....
In the middle of page 98...
... and diabetes. Furthermore, the interventions that would be expected to mediate these differences do not seem to have a substantial effect on these ...
In the middle of page 98...
... Evidence of racial and ethnic disparities was also found in the Kaiser Permanente Health Study in Northern California, which followed people in the health care system over ... years. African Americans, American Indians, and Alaskan Natives were found to have the highest risk of developing dementia, while Asian Americans were at lower risk. Although researchers were not ... some of the social factors, such as education, that might explain these disparities in incident dementia, they were able to look at cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disease, but found that these did not explain the disparities (Mayeda et al., 2016)....
At the bottom of page 98...
... Manly noted that there is also a geographic dimension to these disparities in risk for Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. An analysis of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention death records found that both African Americans and whites have a higher risk ... dying of all-cause dementia if they were born in a “stroke belt” state; even if they migrated to the north and eventually died there, they brought this risk with them from the South (Glymour et al., 2011). Racial disparities in stroke are well known—with ... Americans at higher risk—but it is less commonly known that whites aged 85 years and older are at higher risk of having stroke than African Americans, according to a national longitudinal study of stroke disparities (Howard et al., ...
At the bottom of page 98...
... Methodological Challenges in Brain Health Disparities Research...
At the bottom of page 98...
... use clinic-based or convenience samples, in which participants are recruited from clinics that specialize in memory disorders, for example. Mistrust and stigma are direct causes of the problem of selection bias. She noted that a long history of stigma and mistrust persists to this day, widening the ... between the people who have cognitive impairments and the people who go to a doctor with those complaints. This is a consequence of historical medical abuses, including use of IQ tests to support racist ... medical research for underserved communities facing intractable disparities. Ongoing experiences of discrimination in the medical setting are common, and health care systems broadly lack the necessary cultural and linguistic competencies....
In the middle of page 99...
... Americans who are formally diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease tend to have more psychiatric symptoms of irritability, agitation, paranoia, and behavioral issues than whites who are formally diagnosed....
In the middle of page 99...
... neuropathology in vivo. A study that has been recruiting African Americans in St. Louis for cerebrospinal fluid lumbar puncture collection and PET amyloid imaging recently concluded that there are race-dependent biological mechanisms for these expressions of Alzheimer’s disease (Morris ...
At the bottom of page 99...
... An analysis of the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) and WHICAP studies found a narrowing of the disparity in memory performance between African Americans and whites in the older age group. This is evidence ...
At the bottom of page 99...
... across race (Brickman et al., 2008). Whites have a lower overall burden of white-matter hyperintensities compared to African Americans and Hispanics, with no apparent interaction with age, but the scanning began when people were around 70 years of...
In the middle of page 100...
... age. Interaction or acceleration must have occurred at some point earlier among the African Americans and Hispanics. This highlights another challenge: understanding the neuropathological mechanisms underlying brain health disparities will require ...
In the middle of page 100...
... A more recent study found a tighter link between white-matter hyperintensity burden and cognition in African Americans than in whites (Zahodne et al., 2015). This contrasts with the same study’s findings about the relationship ... cognitive trajectory and hippocampal volume. Whites with low hippocampal volume were at higher risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease than whites with high hippocampal ... ;s disease among the non-Hispanic African Americans in the study. This suggests that there may be different pathways to cognitive decline across race and ethnicity....
In the middle of page 100...
... and other social factors. Higher African ancestry has been associated with having a lower education level, having parents with fewer years of schooling, receiving no inheritance from one’s parents, having a lower income, and having less wealth. Ancestry does not biologically mediate or ...
At the bottom of page 100...
... Manly’s group is working on a study based on the WHICAP cohort dataset looking at cognitive outcomes, racial self-identification, and African ancestry among Caribbean Latino older adults who were followed longitudinally.7 Those people in the lowest quartile of African ancestry had ... cognitive test scores compared to people with a higher degree of African ancestry, but these differences are explained entirely by the quality and quantity of the person’s educational experience and by the...
At the bottom of page 100...
... 7 Available at http://www.nationalacademies.org/hmd/Activities/Aging/BrainHealthAcrossTheLifeSpanWorkshop/2019-JUN-26.aspx (accessed March 12, 2020)....
In the middle of page 101...
... Forthcoming Research on Brain Health Disparities...
In the middle of page 101...
... Manly described forthcoming research based on the dataset from the ongoing Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study, which has followed a large and geographically diverse cohort of older adults in the United States to ... at vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia. An advantage of the REGARDS dataset is that it collects data about every place each participant has ever lived....
In the middle of page 101...
... Effect of Historical Investments in Quality of Schooling on Cognition Later in Life...
At the bottom of page 101...
... Economists have been using the administrative data from schools for many years to predict human capital outcomes and show differences across race in those outcomes. Manly’s group used administrative data to ... the relationship between school quality and race across time and location. Specifically, they looked at the effect of historical investments in quality of schooling on cognition ... in life. For instance, the length of the academic year for schools in the South, particularly for those with African American students, was much shorter than in the North. If an African American person born in the ... reports having gone to school for 8 years in certain states, it is likely that the school was only open about half of the year. Similarly, the student–teacher ratio for African American children in some states was very high, which ... as family socioeconomic status, as well as for state-level or state-fixed effects, Manly’s team found that people across races who attended schools with longer term lengths had improved cognition compared to people who attended schools in states or counties that had shorter term lengths.8...
At the bottom of page 101...
... Based on these data, Manly’s team developed an overall score for school quality based on these administrative records. For every 1-year increase of policy-predicted years of education, people in the REGARDS study were at ...
At the bottom of page 101...
... 8 Manly, J. Workshop presentation—Life-Course Causes of Later-Life Inequalities in Brain Health. Available at http://www.nationalacademies.org/hmd/Activities/Aging/BrainHealthAcrossTheLifeSpanWorkshop/2019-JUN-26.aspx (accessed March 12, ...
In the middle of page 102...
... men, and African American women have a payoff for going to higher-quality schools, but not African American men....
In the middle of page 102...
... Discrimination and Cognitive Function Among Older Non-Hispanic African Americans...
In the middle of page 102...
... among African American men with graduate degrees is negatively related to cognition; this is not the case for African American men who have high school or college degrees....
At the bottom of page 102...
... Leveraging Expanded Datasets...
At the bottom of page 102...
... advantage of studies that start at an earlier age, said Manly. Her group has identified a number of cohorts that began when participants were in high school, such as the Project TALENT dataset and the High School and Beyond dataset. These studies conducted cognitive testing when participants were ...
At the bottom of page 102...
... Ways Forward to Improve Research on Brain Health Disparities...
At the bottom of page 102...
... by offering strategies for improving research on brain health disparities going forward. Racism should be measured in Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia studies, because systemic racism becomes embodied in the biology of racialized groups. This is how race becomes a risk factor for ... inequalities in brain health. Measuring racism will require designing population-based longitudinal studies that bridge the gap between (1) biology and genetics and (2) the life course and social exposome. Population-feasible biomarkers for neuropathology will need to be developed and included in ...
In the middle of page 103...
... those factors measured in the same cohort will it be possible to calculate population-attributable factors. This would allow researchers to explore how intervening in certain social factors could have an effect across the life course....
In the middle of page 103...
... of sampling, and how to discuss these confounds in their work. Social forces such as racism and discrimination, educational quality and increasing school segregation, and neighborhood inequalities should be acknowledged explicitly in national plans to reduce the effect or burden of neuropathology and ...
At the bottom of page 103...
... Professor at The Rockefeller University, remarked that the Safe American Family (SAF) study has looked at how building bonds between adolescents and their parents or caregivers, as well as mitigating bullying and racial discrimination, can improve physical and mental health outcomes 10 to 15 years ... , including brain volume and type 2 diabetes. Manly replied that it is critical to understand how these types of interventions have effects throughout the life course; the role of inflammation in metabolic syndromes and Alzheimer’s ... known pathway toward dementia that can be exacerbated—especially in people with certain genotypes—by experiences such as abuse, neglect, and poverty. Understanding the roles of inflammation and overactivity of glutamatergic systems in the brain that drive the amyloid-beta hypothesis about ...
At the bottom of page 103...
... older age or by designing earlier life-course studies to incorporate those types of measures, so they will be valuable for long-term studies of aging and brain health. In terms of retrospective measures that could be added, Manly emphasized the value of retrospectively collecting and geocoding...
In the middle of page 104...
... from older adult participants about every place they have ever lived. These data have great value in analyzing the effects of childhood exposures and administrative policies in educational systems on the trajectory of brain health. For example, they can be used to look at factors such as ... , green spaces, business, and crime....
In the middle of page 104...
... Studies are looking at how the policing and punishment policies in individual schools may relate to stress and outcomes in children as well as to later-life outcomes. In terms of designing early-life studies to add value to later-life ...
At the bottom of page 104...
... PANEL DISCUSSION ON BRAIN HEALTH IN THE SOCIAL CONTEXT...
At the bottom of page 104...
... asked the panelists to discuss how the definition of brain health affects how its outcomes should be measured—for instance, quality of life and stress are reflected in various types of outcomes depending on the population being described. Barch replied that brain health can be thought about ... (1) a person’s accumulative reserve, which sets the intercept or starting point, and (2) the degree to which a person is affected by adversities, such as stress or the onset of illness. These adversities are likely to be related and ... apart unless they are measured from an early stage—from birth or even in utero would be ideal. Social determinants are being set in utero, and exposures could potentially be setting up a proinflammatory phenotype very early in life that has effects later. More practically, it would be ... to focus on intermediate outcomes that are already known to be predictive and to look at whether their genesis is even earlier than assumed....
At the bottom of page 104...
... be useful to be explicit that the trajectories of cognitive decline start much earlier in life, before they have their greatest effect on function and impose the greatest burden and cost to society. Manly also highlighted the challenge of how to measure brain health across the entire life course. ... suggested linking and triangulating among studies focusing on different...
At the bottom of page 105...
... and design new studies and new research. Ted Satterthwaite, assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, remarked that investment will be needed to harmonize, chain back, and link those data sources. A relatively small, inexpensive study ...

A total of pages of uncorrected, machine-read text were searched in this chapter. Please note that the searchable text may be scanned, uncorrected text, and should be presumed inaccurate. Page images should be used as the authoritative version.