Claim Details

View detailed information about this claim and its related sources.

Back to Claims

Claim Information

Complete details about this extracted claim.

Claim Text
The activity engagement with the most robust consequences for cognitive resilience may be early-life education (Albert et al., 1995; Lövdén et al., 2020).
Simplified Text
Early-life education may have the most robust consequences for cognitive resilience
Confidence Score
0.700
Claim Maker
The author
Context Type
Research Article
Context Details
{
    "date": "2022-07-10",
    "journal": "Frontiers in Psychology",
    "section": "Psychology of Aging",
    "potential_benefit": "Most robust consequences for cognitive resilience"
}
UUID
9fc8a31e-70ca-4529-8b1b-d42958750b27
Vector Index
✗ No vector
Created
September 2, 2025 at 7:19 PM (6 days ago)
Last Updated
September 2, 2025 at 7:19 PM (6 days ago)

Original Sources for this Claim (1)

All source submissions that originally contained this claim.

Screenshot of https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.923795/full?campaign_id=18&emc=edit_hh_20250829&instance_id=161530&nl=well&regi_id=122976029&segment_id=204892&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.923795/full?campaign_id=18&emc=edit_hh_20250829&instance_id=161530&nl=well&regi_id=122976029&segment_id=204892&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337

Study shows sustained reading improves verbal working memory and episodic memory in older adults. Enhanced conceptual integration in sentence processing also observed.

Cognitive Aging
Literacy
Reading
Memory
Language Processing
Cognitive Enrichment

Similar Claims (0)

Other claims identified as semantically similar to this one.

No similar claims found

This claim appears to be unique in the system.

Claim Management System - MVP