2014
DOI: 10.1620/tjem.234.197
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Personality Traits as Predictors of Decline in Higher-Level Functional Capacity over a 7-Year Follow-Up in Older Adults: The Ohasama Study

Abstract: Numerous factors that affect functional decline have been identified, and personality traits are considered to be an important factor in functional decline risk. The Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology Index of Competence (TMIG) was developed to measure three higher-level functional capacities, instrumental activities of daily living, intellectual activity, and social roles, in Japanese elderly, which were previously not assessed adequately with existing scales of functional decline. The objective of t… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(49 reference statements)
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“…Such a result indicates that the higher the neuroticism indices are, the stronger the depressive symptomatology is in the elderly. It corroborates the findings of other studies (Ayotte et al, 2009;Koorevaar et al, 2013;Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014;Weiss et al, 2009). Neuroticism, besides being a risk factor to trigger depression, represents a risk for functional decline among the elderly in the future (Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014) and it is associated to Alzheimer's Disease (Terracciano et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…Such a result indicates that the higher the neuroticism indices are, the stronger the depressive symptomatology is in the elderly. It corroborates the findings of other studies (Ayotte et al, 2009;Koorevaar et al, 2013;Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014;Weiss et al, 2009). Neuroticism, besides being a risk factor to trigger depression, represents a risk for functional decline among the elderly in the future (Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014) and it is associated to Alzheimer's Disease (Terracciano et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…It corroborates the findings of other studies (Ayotte et al, 2009;Koorevaar et al, 2013;Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014;Weiss et al, 2009). Neuroticism, besides being a risk factor to trigger depression, represents a risk for functional decline among the elderly in the future (Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014) and it is associated to Alzheimer's Disease (Terracciano et al, 2014). Some studies state the hypothesis that Neuroticism is related to reduced brain volume (Knutson, Momenan, Rawlings, Fong, & Hommer, 2001) and to risk behaviors to health such as metabolic syndrome, early mortality (Löckenhoff et al, 2012), and inflammation (Sutin et al, 2010).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…In previous studies among Japanese subjects, physical activity or physical ability (Nakamoto et al, 2015, Sugiura et al, 2013), social capital (engagement in a cohesive group) (Kondo et al, 2007), self-rated health (Sugiura et al, 2011), and personality traits of lower psychoticism and higher extraversion (Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014) were significantly associated with higher levels of competence. These results indicate not only physical or social activity but also current health are associated with future competence, and subjects with higher extraversion tend to decide to and have healthier practices (Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Among these factors, higher physical activity or physical ability, such as handgrip strength or walking speed, were associated with higher levels of competence (Nakamoto et al, 2015, Sugiura et al, 2013). Although a few investigations have reported the negative effects of smoking, longer sleep duration, poor self-rated health, lower animal protein intake, personality traits, and lower social participation on higher levels of competence (Imai et al, 2014, Tomioka et al, 2015, Tsubota-Utsugi et al, 2014), the impact of other lifestyle-related factors on loss of higher levels of competence is not well understood. In addition, it is not clear whether an accumulation of healthy lifestyle-related factors within individuals, as measured by the total number of healthy practices, is associated with higher levels of competence.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%