Super-Agers Over 80 Have Great Memory Skills and Strong Social Ties

Staff
By Staff
7 Min Read

Memory loss has long been viewed as a normal part of getting older. But for some people, memory remains exceptionally sharp.

For 25 years, scientists at Northwestern University in Chicago have been studying these so-called super-agers — people over age 80 whose memory matches that of someone 20 to 30 years younger — to better understand what sets their remarkable brains apart.

One important aspect is their sociability, says Tamar Gefen, PhD, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and the director of the Laboratory for Translational Neuropsychology at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern in Chicago. Dr. Gefen recently coauthored a new report that highlights key findings of super-ager research.

Caring seems to be a key component of super-aging. Compared with their cognitively average peers, super-agers are the opposite of apathetic, says Gefen; they are actively engaged with other people and activities.

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