Factors of Resilience to Alzheimers Disease and Related Dementias among Latinx: The Role of Bilingualism
Columbia University Health Sciences, New York NY
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Abstract
Project Summary/Abstract As the population ages, Latinx communities, families, and healthcare systems will be confronted by the growing crisis of Alzheimerâs disease and related dementias (ADRD). Identifying factors that confer resilience to ADRD among aging Latinx communities is of critical importance to successfully reduce disparities. Some studies find that bilinguals are at reduced AD risk compared to monolinguals, but other studies do not find evidence of a bilingual advantage. Little attention has been given to within-group differences among bilinguals, such as age of second language (L2) acquisition, proficiency, and frequency of language use, and how these differences 1) are related to cognitive function in older age, 2) if they buffer the effects of neuropathology on cognitive decline, and 3) how cognitive decline in AD can influence language use among bilinguals. Determination of the aspects of bilingualism that confer resilience to AD could lead to novel interventions to mitigate cognitive aging and ADRD disparities. The overall aim of this project is to determine whether aspects of bilingualism, including age of acquisition, language use, and proficiency, buffer the effects of neuroimaging markers of pathology (i.e., AD biomarkers and cerebrovascular disease) on cognition and cognitive decline within middle- and older-aged Latinx adults. The K99 phase of this study showed that earlier age of acquisition, greater L2 proficiency, and greater daily bilingual language use, but not increased code-switching, were positively associated with episodic memory, language abilities, and aspects of executive functioning, independent of confounding sociocultural factors (i.e., education, socioeconomic status, immigration). In the R00 phase, the relationship between bilingualism and imaging markers on cognitive decline will be evaluated (Aim 1) and we will evaluate whether change in cognitive status is associated with longitudinal changes in bilingualism (Aim 2). The proposed study will harmonize data from Latinx adults currently enrolled in three longitudinal cohorts with available amyloid and tau PET, MRI, and cognitive assessments: the Offspring study and the Washington Heights-Inwood Columbia Aging Project at Columbia University, and the University of California-Davis Diversity Aging Cohort. To accomplish these goals, the applicant has built on his strengths in cultural neuropsychology, health disparities, and statistical methods through the training obtained during the K99 phase focused on 1) expanding knowledge of the cognitive neuroscience and psycholinguistics of bilingualism; 2) modeling neuroimaging data; 3) the operationalization and measurement of resilience among aging Latinx populations; and 4) enhancing statistical methods focused on data harmonization, casual inference methods and latent variable modeling. This R00 proposal lays the foundation for an independent research career focused on mechanisms underlying the protective factors of bilingualism in cognitive aging.
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