Timothy A. Salthouse
University of Virginia
295 Papers
4.5K Citations
Timothy A. Salthouse is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Cognitive skill. The author has an hindex of 94, co-authored 295 publications. Previous affiliations of Timothy A. Salthouse include University of Michigan & Georgia Institute of Technology.
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Papers
Therapeutics for cognitive aging.
Diana W Shineman,Timothy A. Salthouse,Lenore J. Launer,Patrick R. Hof,George Bartzokis,Robin J. Kleiman,Victoria N. Luine,Jerry J. Buccafusco,Gary W. Small,Paul S. Aisen,David A. Lowe,Howard Fillit +11 more
TL;DR: This review summarizes the scientific talks presented at the conference “Therapeutics for Cognitive Aging,” hosted by the New York Academy of Sciences and the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation on May 15, 2009, which tackled the many aspects of developing therapeutic interventions for cognitive impairment.
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Do cognitive interventions alter the rate of age-related cognitive change?
TL;DR: A very simple intervention consisting of the performance of three versions (treatment) or one version (control) of the relevant cognitive tests at an initial occasion found no evidence that the intervention affected the course of age-related cognitive decline.
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Assessing Cognition in Older Adults with the WAIS–IV, WMS–IV, and ACS
Lisa Whipple Drozdick,James A. Holdnack,Timothy A. Salthouse,C. Munro Cullum +3 more
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of typical versus atypical changes in cognitive functioning and the tests used to identify potential pathological changes in the cognitive functioning of older adults, including perceptual reasoning, working memory, memory and processing speed.
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Why is cognitive change more negative with increased age
TL;DR: Cognitive change was more negative with increases in the interval between occasions but was more positive with additional measurement occasions, and both the effects of interval and of number of measurement occasions were similar across adulthood.
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Frequency-of-occurrence memory over the adult lifespan.
TL;DR: A modest, but statistically significant, age-related deficit was found, with the decrement in proficiency being largest from middle to late adulthood.
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