Xianghe Zhu
North Carolina State University
15 Papers
3 Citations
Xianghe Zhu is an academic researcher from North Carolina State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Loneliness and risk of all-cause, Alzheimer's, vascular, and frontotemporal dementia: a prospective study of 492,322 individuals over 15 years.
Angelina R. Sutin,Martina Luchetti,Damaris Aschwanden,Xianghe Zhu,Yannick Stephan,Antonio Terracciano +5 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the association between loneliness and risk of incident all-cause dementia and whether the association extends to specific causes of dementia and concluded that loneliness is associated with increased risk of multiple types of dementia.
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Satisfaction with life and risk of dementia: Findings from the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging.
Xianghe Zhu,Martina Luchetti,Damaris Aschwanden,Amanda A. Sesker,Yannick Stephan,Angelina R. Sutin,Antonio Terracciano +6 more
TL;DR: Higher life satisfaction was also associated with lower risk of dementia, even after accounting for demographic factors, depressive symptoms, cardiovascular and functional risk factors, health behaviors, and social contact.
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Multidimensional Assessment of Subjective Well-being and Risk of Dementia: Findings from the UK Biobank Study
Xianghe Zhu,Martina Luchetti,Damaris Aschwanden,Amanda A. Sesker,Yannick Stephan,Angelina R. Sutin,Antonio Terracciano +6 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the associations between subjective well-being (SWB) and risk of all-cause dementia, Alzheimer's disease (AD), and vascular dementia (VD).
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Facets of Personality and Risk of Cognitive Impairment: Longitudinal Findings in a Rural Community from Sardinia.
Antonio Terracciano,M.R. Piras,Angelina R. Sutin,Alessandro P Delitala,Nicolò Curreli,Lenuta Balaci,Michele Marongiu,Xianghe Zhu,Damaris Aschwanden,Martina Luchetti,Richard Yé boah Oppong,David Schlessinger,Francesco Cucca,Lenore J. Launer,Edoardo Fiorillo +14 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the association between personality and the risk of cognitive impairment and found that participants with higher neuroticism (particularly the depression facet [HR 1.22, 95% CI 1.06-1.40]), and lower agreeableness (such as the modesty facet (HR 0.65-0.87), facet of extraversion) and ideas ([HR 0,0.71 -0.97]) were at higher risk of dementia, while higher conscientiousness and lower conscientiousness were associated with increased risk of impairment.
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Subjective Cognitive Decline: Is a Resilient Personality Protective Against Progression to Objective Cognitive Impairment? Findings from Two Community-Based Cohort Studies.
Damaris Aschwanden,Angelina R. Sutin,Thomas Ledermann,Martina Luchetti,Yannick Stephan,Amanda A. Sesker,Xianghe Zhu,Antonio Terracciano +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examined whether lower neuroticism and higher conscientiousness-resilient personality traits-protect against conversion from subjective cognitive decline to objective cognitive impairment in two longitudinal community-based cohorts.
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