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Home > Resources > Participatory and Receptive Arts Engagement in Older Adults: Associations with Cognition Over a Seven-Year Period

Participatory and Receptive Arts Engagement in Older Adults: Associations with Cognition Over a Seven-Year Period

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Abstract:
There is growing evidence for the impact of arts engagement on later life cognition. However, confounding by socioeconomic factors may have led to an overestimation of this association. We analyzed data from 4,344 older adults in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study. We measured participatory (e.g. painting, making music, crafts) and receptive (e.g. concert, play, museum) arts engagement separately. Participants completed six neurocognitive tests measuring two distinct domains of cognitive function (episodic/working memory and executive function/language) concurrently and seven years later. We used inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) to remove confounding by a range of demographic and socioeconomic factors. Engaging in participatory or receptive arts for up to one hour per week (but not more frequently) was associated with better subsequent executive function/language. Similarly, engaging in receptive arts activities for up to three hours per week (but not more frequently) was associated with better subsequent episodic/working memory. These effects were of similar sizes to doing vigorous physical activity for up to one hour per week. However, our findings also highlight key methodological issues when exploring the relationship between arts engagement and cognition that should be considered in future studies, including measurement bias, life-course stage, length of follow-up, variation in outcomes, attrition, and missing data.

What They Found:
Both participatory arts (creating art, music, or crafts) and receptive arts (attending concerts, plays, or museums) for up to one hour per week were associated with better executive function and language abilities, including reasoning and verbal fluency, seven years later. People who spent up to three hours a week also had better memory.

Why It Matters:
Even small amounts of creative participation may protect thinking and memory as people age.

How You Can Use This:
Encourage steady, weekly participation in your programming as a tool for brain health, including both receptive arts like concerts and hands-on art classes.

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subject terms

Aging & Longevity

Aging & Longevity > Health: Brain & Mental

Aging & Longevity > Health

Creative Aging

Creative Aging > Creative Expression

Creative Aging > Skills Mastery

Creative Aging > Social Engagement

contributors

Jessica Bone

Feifei Bu

Daisy Fancourt

Jill Sonke

related organizations

Creativity Research Journal

Taylor & Francis Online

resource type

Research and Studies

year

2023

Founded in 2008, Lifetime Arts catalyzes and connects the people, funding, practical strategies, and bold ideas necessary to embrace all older adults as creative and social learners.

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