When Retirement Leads to Memory Decline

By Sandrine Belier Ph.D., posted on December 10, 2010 at 11:02 am

retirementIf you are now looking at the picture and thinking “This is how I want my retirement to look like”, think again! A recent paper with the title “Mental Retirement” is currently suggesting that early retirement may lead to quicker memory decline.

According to Laura L. Carstensen from Stanford University, “[The study] suggests that work actually provides an important component of the environment that keeps people functioning optimally.” The analysis of the data which was collected for the study suggested people may have to engage in stimulating activities to preserve memory and reasoning skills after their retirement.

The study which was published by economists Susann Rohwedder and Robert J. Willis in The Journal of Economic Perspectives supports the “use it or lose it” theory as well as the idea that cognitively stimulating activities may delay cognitive aging. It was started about 20 years ago by the National Institute on Aging on a sample of 22,000 Americans who were submitted to memory tests every two years. Several European then started their own national studies and are being followed by countries such as Japan and Corea, using similar proceedings in order to obtain comparable data. It was found that “the longer people in a country keep working, the better, as a group, they do on the tests when they are in their early 60s”.

For more information, click here to read the article or …

Taking Early Retirement May Retire Memory, Too

One Comment


  1. I figured out that retirement could have an effect on memory
    Because when one doesn’t have a lot to stimulate our brain that could very well be a problem
    And for me I love puzzles, writing articles and crafts that I design and make penny rugs is a plus for me.
    I always enjoy designing cause it stimulates my 71 year old brain are always positive for me

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