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Cognitive Aging Through a Life Course Lens: The Roles of Childhood Socioeconomic Status, Adult Education, and Aging Self-Perceptions in Older Women
Department: Psychology
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Paper000
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Pocatello
Unknown to Unknown
Kellie E. Brown
Idaho State University
Dissertation
No
3/4/2026
digital
City: Pocatello
Doctorate
Women face a disproportionately higher lifetime risk of age-related cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease, yet the psychosocial mechanisms underlying these disparities are poorly understood. Guided by a life-course framework, this study examined how childhood socioeconomic status and adult education jointly relate to later-life cognitive function among women, and whether self-perceptions of aging (SPA) moderates these associations. Data from 851 women in the Health and Retirement Study who completed psychosocial measures in the 2010 wave and cognitive measures in the 2014 wave were analyzed with moderated-mediation models (PROCESS Model 15), adjusting for age, race, self-rated health, depressive symptoms, and survey weights. Higher cSES predicted more years of adult education and greater adult education predicted better cognitive performance. The indirect effect of cSES on cognition through education was significant, but the direct effect was not, indicating full mediation. Neither cSES × SPA nor education × SPA interactions reached significance. Findings replicated and extended earlier work, as adult education fully mediated the link between cSES and later-life cognition in women, while also revealing that SPA did not moderate this relationship. Results emphasize the role of educational opportunities in translating cSES into cognitive health decades later, suggesting that policies aimed at expanding adult education may help mitigate women’s risk for cognitive decline. Keywords: life course models, latency, pathways, cognitive aging, self-perceptions of aging, childhood socioeconomic status

Cognitive Aging Through a Life Course Lens: The Roles of Childhood Socioeconomic Status, Adult Education, and Aging Self-Perceptions in Older Women

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