Predictors of activities of daily living in heathy older adults: Who benefits most from online cognitive training?

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Abstract

Objectives: To investigate the course of activities of daily living (IADL) functioning and possible predictors of performance changes in healthy older adults conducting either a General Cognitive Training (GCT) or a Reasoning Cognitive Training (ReaCT) or no training (control group, CG) over a period of 6 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months. Setting and participants: An online, home-based GCT and ReaCT including n = 2913 healthy participants (GCT: n = 1096; ReaCT: n = 1022; CG: n = 794) aged 60 years and older. Methods: Multilevel analysis were calculated to explore the nature of our outcome variables of IADL part A (independence) and part B (difficulty of tasks), and to detect possible predictors for participants’ performance on IADL after CT. Results: The random slopes models fitted better for the outcomes IADL Part B in the GCT group (χ2(2) = 18.78, p

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Roheger, M., Kalbe, E., Corbett, A., Brooker, H., & Ballard, C. (2021). Predictors of activities of daily living in heathy older adults: Who benefits most from online cognitive training? Brain and Behavior, 11(11). https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.2388

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