Title of article :
Religiosity is negatively associated with later-life intelligence, but not with age-related cognitive decline
Author/Authors :
Ritchie، نويسنده , , Stuart J. and Gow، نويسنده , , Alan J. and Deary، نويسنده , , Ian J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
9
From page :
9
To page :
17
Abstract :
A well-replicated finding in the psychological literature is the negative correlation between religiosity and intelligence. However, several studies also conclude that one form of religiosity, church attendance, is protective against later-life cognitive decline. No effects of religious belief per se on cognitive decline have been found, potentially due to the restricted measures of belief used in previous studies. Here, we examined the associations between religiosity, intelligence, and cognitive change in a cohort of individuals (initial n = 550) with high-quality measures of religious belief taken at age 83 and multiple cognitive measures taken in childhood and at four waves between age 79 and 90. We found that religious belief, but not attendance, was negatively related to intelligence. The effect size was smaller than in previous studies of younger participants. Longitudinal analyses showed no effect of either religious belief or attendance on cognitive change either from childhood to old age, or across the ninth decade of life. We discuss differences between our cohort and those in previous studies – including in age and location – that may have led to our non-replication of the association between religious attendance and cognitive decline.
Keywords :
RELIGION , Cognitive Decline , Latent growth curve , intelligence
Journal title :
Intelligence (Kidlington)
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Intelligence (Kidlington)
Record number :
2377953
Link To Document :
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