Personality-Activity Alignment: Implications for Dementia Risk Reduction
Joseph Svec, Yulri Kim, Jeong Eun Lee, Natasha Nemmers

TL;DR
This study explores how personality traits and activity levels interact to influence dementia risk in older adults.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel perspective on how personality-activity alignment affects dementia risk.
Findings
Social activities are linked to reduced dementia risk, but this effect varies with personality traits.
High neuroticism increases dementia risk despite social activity engagement.
Conscientiousness enhances the protective effects of social activities against dementia.
Abstract
Certain personality types (i.e. neuroticism) are often accompanied by higher risks of cognitive decline, whereas others of the “big five” (i.e. conscientiousness) correspond with lower risks. However, such associations largely focus on independent associations of personality types and cognitive health. We extend this literature by focusing on the connections between personality types and personal behaviors, specifically the extent to which older adults engage in social and non-social activities. Utilizing a person-environmental fit perspective, this study examines not only the associations between activity associations and cognitive decline but also whether the configurations of personality-activity dimensions amplify such activity effects. Using the Health and Retirement Study (N = 3,380), we run a series of logistic regressions results predicting dementia. Preliminary findings suggest…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPersonality Traits and Psychology · Personality Disorders and Psychopathology · Psychological Testing and Assessment
