Does Schooling Improve Cognitive Abilities at Older Ages?

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Interdisciplinary Centers, Units and Projects::Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics
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Public Health
Subject
Improving Care for Older Adults
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2023
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Tachibana, Chris
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Tachibana, Chris
Amin, Vikesh
Behrman, Jere
Fletcher, Jason
Flores, Carlos
Flores-Lagunes, Alfonso
Kohler, Hans-Peter
Abstract

In older U.S. adults, higher levels of education resulted in better performance on tests that assess cognitive function in a study using innovative methods that provided average causal effects of schooling on a broad population. Higher cognitive scores were most prominent among college-educated individuals compared to high school graduates: A college education led to the equivalent of a 1.4- to 5.4-point increase on a 100-point cognitive test.

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2023-02-02
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Leonard Davis Institute of Health Ecoomics
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