About this Research Topic
Since the 1970s researchers have employed many terms including resilience, cognitive reserve, brain reserve, brain maintenance, among others. As well as different designs have been applied, such as epidemiologic, clinical, intervention, imaging and basic animal research. However, there is still a need for more evidence regarding genetics and life span exposures that could increase cognitive reserve and contribute to some people being more resilient than others.
In the last decades the study of CR has critically contributed to our understanding of the individual differences explaining cognitive advantages in older age. However, the field still needs to progress in some fundamental aspects that will represent key questions for this research topic, including, 1) provide further definition of concepts and terminologies, 2) specify evidence regarding environmental factors leading to more positive or negative cognitive reserve as education, reading habits, socioeconomic background, daily life stimulation, among other, 3) gather new evidence of lifespan approaches in interplay with the genetic background within the CR research, 4) a more refined characterization of how brain resilience networks operate in the face of normal ageing and pathology, 5) provide evidence-based interventions to promote CR and identify individual characteristics and factors that predict positive outcomes, and 6) how animal and human research can be integrated to advance this research field.
This Research Topic will accept manuscript regarding cognitive reserve, brain reserve and/or brain maintenance in human and/or animal research.
Researches can encompass, but are not limited to, the following:
1) Genetic factors.
2) Lifestyle exposures or stimulation, such as early-life general cognitive ability (e.g., intelligence), education, occupation, physical exercise, leisure activities, daily cognitive stimulation, reading and writing habits, social engagement or psychoaffective measures.
3) Neuroimaging approaches to characterize CR/brain resilience mechanisms, including structural (volume; white matter tract integrity), functional (resting-state or activation fMRI studies, metabolism) as well as biomarker-based (i.e., amyloid, tau, synaptic, inflammatory) imaging.
4) Molecular or cellular systems, among others.
5) Intervention studies to enhance reserve/resilience, with preventive or remediative aims.
Types of manuscripts of interest include Brief Research Report, Case Report, Clinical Trial, Conceptual Analysis, Hypothesis and Theory, Methods, Mini Review, Original Research, and Systematic Review.
Keywords: Cognitive reserve, resilience, brain reserve, brain maintenance, aging
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.