Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine (Jan 2023)

Discrepancies in Objective and Subjective Cognition in Middle-Aged and Older Adults: Does Personality Matter?

  • Amy N. Costa MA,
  • Lauren M. Nowakowski BS,
  • Christina S. McCrae PhD,
  • Nelson Cowan PhD,
  • Ashley F. Curtis PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23337214221146663
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Associations between subjective cognition and current objective functioning are inconclusive. Given known associations between personality and cognition, this study tested whether personality moderates associations between subjective memory and objective cognition in middle-aged and older adults. Participants ( N = 62, M age = 63.8, SD = 7.7, 33 men) completed assessments of personality (Big Five Inventory-10), subjective memory (Cognitive Failures Questionnaire [CFQ-memory]), and objective cognition (processing speed, attention, inhibition [Stroop], working memory [Sternberg], set-shifting [Wisconsin Card Sorting Task]). Multiple regressions and simple slopes analyses examined whether personality moderates associations between subjective memory and objective cognition, controlling for age, number of medical conditions, and household income. Extraversion moderated associations between processing speed and CFQ-memory. Agreeableness moderated associations between set-shifting and CFQ-memory. Among individuals with higher extraversion and lower agreeableness, objectively worse cognition was associated with the fewest memory complaints. Findings suggest personality may impact the discrepancies between subjective memory and objective cognition in mid-to-late life.