“Interindividual Differences in General Cognitive Ability from Age 18 to Age 65 Years Are Extremely Stable and Strongly Associated With Working Memory Capacity”, Michael Rönnlund, Anna Sundström, Lars-Göran Nilsson2015-11 ()⁠:

The objective of the study was to examine the degree of stability of interindividual differences in general cognitive ability (g) across the adult life span.

To this end, we examined a sample of men (n = 262), cognitively assessed for the first time at age 18 (conscript data). The sample was reassessed at age 50 and at 5 year intervals up to age 65. Scores from conscript tests at age 18 were retrieved and 3 of the subtests were used as indicators of g in early adulthood. At age 50–65 years, 4 indicators served the same purpose. At the 15-year follow-up (age 65) two working memory measures were administered which allowed examination of the relationship with working memory capacity.

Results: from structural equation modeling (SEM) indicated extremely high level of stability from young adulthood to age 50 (standardized regression coefficient = −0.95) as well as from age 50 to age 55, 60 and 65 with stability coefficients of 0.90 or higher for the latent g factor. Standardized regression coefficients between young-adult g and the g factor in midlife/old age were 0.95 from age 18 up to age 50 and 55, 0.94 up to age 60, and 0.86 up to age 65. Hence, g at age 18 accounted for 90–74% of the variance in g 32–47 years later.

A close association between g and working memory capacity was observed (concurrent association: r = 0.88, time lagged association: r = 0.61).

Taken together, the present study demonstrates that interindividual differences in g are extremely stable over the period from 18 to midlife, with a statistically-significant deviation from unity only at age 65. In light of the parieto-frontal integration theory (P-FIT) of intelligence, consistent with the close association between g and working memory capacity, midlife may be characterized by neural stability, with decline and decreased interindividual stability, related to loss of parieto-frontal integrity, past age 60.

[Keywords: general cognitive ability, inter-individual differences, stability, longitudinal]

Figure 1: Summary of results of structural equation models (Models 1–4) designed to estimate degree of stability of interindividual differences in adulthood.