
Retiring at 55 and spending the rest of your life relaxing on the front porch may sound appealing, but if you want your brain to keep working, it's probably not a good idea. Mounting evidence shows that staying in the workforce into old age is good not only for our bank accounts, but also for our health and mental acuity…
The fact that a person is working may not in itself be as important as the kind of work one does, cautions Ursula Staudinger, director of the Columbia Aging Center and the lead author of a 2014 study of assembly line workers in Germany showing that those who changed tasks more often over 16 years had better brain function and cognitive performance than those who did not…
"We have found that work stimulates cognitive development to the extent that work is engaging and also challenging," said Jacquelyn James, co-director of the Sloan Center on Aging and Work at Boston College.
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Category(s):Aging & Geriatric Issues
Source material from Sharpbrains