Brain Decline Begins At Age 27 381
krou writes "The BBC is reporting that a new study suggests that our mental abilities start to dwindle at 27 after peaking at 22, and 27 could be seen as the 'start of old age.' The seven-year study, by Professor Timothy Salthouse of the University of Virginia, looked at 2,000 healthy people aged 18-60, and used a number of mental agility tests already used to spot signs of dementia. 'The first age at which there was any marked decline was at 27 in tests of brain speed, reasoning and visual puzzle-solving ability. Things like memory stayed intact until the age of 37, on average, while abilities based on accumulated knowledge, such as performance on tests of vocabulary or general information, increased until the age of 60.'"
Re:Noooooo! (Score:5, Informative)
The time is gone, the song is over,
Thought I'd something more to say.
39? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Uh-huh (Score:4, Informative)
That's why the summary says, "abilities based on accumulated knowledge, such as performance on tests of vocabulary or general information, increased until the age of 60" (emphasis mine).
It's not your accumulated knowledge that declines initially, it's "brain speed, reasoning and visual puzzle-solving ability". When you consider that things such as dementia and alzheimer's are believed to begin several years before they noticeably affect you, your "decline" is going to be very subtle, and over a long period of time.
Oh, and the headline was the BBC's.
Re:Peaking at 22 (Score:4, Informative)
Hey folks guess what. We are discovering brain exercise procedures that will improve a lot of these mental functions and slow their decline. No I'm not selling anything, but I am a research that is conducting this kind of work.
For retaining and improving working memory, try a regimen of the n-back test. BTW, working memory is a large component of IQ.
Re:Confounding Variable (Score:5, Informative)
Googling the name of the journal, Neurobiology of Aging, leads to the abstract [neurobiologyofaging.org] for this study:
In other words, the researchers were wayyyy ahead of slashdot. They analyzed both cross-sectional and prospective longitudinal designs. They modeled and controlled for potential confounds due to (a) sampling bias in cross-sectional comparisons (point raised by grandparent) and (b) practice-effect biases in longitudinal comparisons (because if you take any test twice, you'll probably do better the second time). They also validated their results with other methods (like neurobiological assessments). What they got was a convergence of results from multiple methods, which is exactly what good science is supposed to be.
Re:No! Wrong wrong wrong!!! (Score:3, Informative)
Interesting post - relating it to databases. From what I have read, IQ has two main components, gC and gF, standing for Crystallized and Fluid intelligence. Fluid intelligence is raw problem solving ability, crystallized intelligence is the database aspect you are referring to (tables, the data in the tables and the queries you have built up over the years). I guess fluid intelligence is more the ability to create the right tables, fill them up with good data, and creating meaningful queries.
Fluid intelligence is known to peak in young adulthood and then steadily decline. Crystallized intelligence gradually rises and then stays stable through most of adulthood, declining after 65 on average. I think practically for many things, the increase or maintenance in gC offsets the decrease in gF.
I notice the drop in gF type things in myself - I certainly don't have the superior reaction times I did in my late teens. If I play an FPS, I have learned to make up for that by playing in a more patient manner and playing the percentages - picking my battles. It's harder to say about the reasoning, I haven't noticed much decline yet. But I certainly notice having the larger database of information and more queries, and more refined queries of gC, which enables me to solve some problems much quicker than previously.
Eventually though, it's downhill and I hope to anticipate that and lower my expectations accordingly.