People who retain an ability to spot things quickly in later life are more likely to stay mentally sharp, a study says.

Tests carried out on people over 70 suggest that a decline in general intelligence in old age is linked to a decline in visual processing efficiency - the brain’s ability to reach conclusions about what the eye is seeing.

Links with intelligence

Researchers at the University of Edinburgh tested more than 600 people for visual processing at ages 70, 73 and 76 using a test which flashes one of two shapes on a screen. It then measured the time each person needed to reliably to tell one shape from the other.

They then compared result of the visual tests with several intelligence tests taken by the study’s participants at the same ages.

The team found that as the brain’s ability to make correct decisions based on visual impressions declined, so did intelligence levels.

Understanding age related mental decline

Researchers say the findings suggest that the slowing of visual processing may be part of a wider decline in complex decision making, linked to general intelligence.

The results suggest that the brain’s ability to make correct decisions based on brief visual impressions limits the efficiency of more complex functions. As this basic ability declines with age, so too does general intelligence. The typical person who has better-preserved complex thinking skills in old age tends to be someone who can accumulate information quickly from a fleeting glance. Dr Stuart Ritchie, Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology,

Understanding why some people retain their thinking skills better than others in older age is important. In this study we tried to isolate one of the processes that underlies age-related mental decline. Next, we shall to find the brain structures health factors, and any lifestyle habits that support the retaining of both efficient visual processing and general intelligence. Professor Ian Deary Director of the study

The group tested were part of the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936, a group of individuals who were born in 1936 and took part in the Scottish Mental Survey of 1947.

Individuals have been tested on a number of physical and mental functions as they grow older, including changes in reasoning, memory, speed of thinking, many aspects of fitness and health, eyesight, blood composition and genetics.

The study, published in the Cell Press journal, Current Biology was funded by Age UK, which funds the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936, and the UK’s Medical Research Council. The work was undertaken in the Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology as part of the Lifelong Health and Wellbeing Initiative which is funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council and the Medical Research Council.