Exploring Multigenerational Relationships and Episodic Memory in Later Life: A Study of Childhood Family Dynamics
Kimson Johnson, Maddison Linker

TL;DR
This study explores how childhood family dynamics, including parental relationships and living with grandparents, affect episodic memory in older adults.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel analysis of how multigenerational family dynamics interact to influence cognitive health in later life.
Findings
Good parental relationships are linked to better episodic memory in older adults.
Living with grandparents does not buffer the negative effects of poor parental relationships on memory.
Poor parental relationships significantly reduce episodic memory scores, even with grandparental co-residence.
Abstract
Understanding how childhood family dynamics shape cognitive health in later life is important for addressing cognitive decline, yet this topic remains understudied. This study investigates the impact of parental relationship quality and grandparental co-residence on episodic memory in older adults, exploring whether living with grandparents in childhood buffers the negative cognitive effects of poor parental relationships. Data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) 2015-2017 Life History Mail Survey, the Childhood Family and Health, and the 2020 Cross-Wave Imputation of Cognitive Functioning Measures were used (n = 3,991; Mage = 71.9, SE = 0.27). Parental relationship quality and grandparental co-residence were categorized into four groups: (1) good parental relationship, lived with grandparents; (2) good parental relationship, did not live with grandparents; (3) poor parental…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Aging and Gerontology Research · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
