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Study links air pollution and a decline in cognitive function

A study suggests that long-term exposure to pollutants in the air you breathe could negatively affect your cognitive functioning.
A study suggests that long-term exposure to pollutants in the air you breathe could negatively affect your cognitive functioning.

Has your brain been feeling foggy lately? Or maybe, smoggy? If you live somewhere affected by air pollution, there might be a connection. A recent study suggests that long-term exposure to pollutants in the air you breathe could negatively affect your cognitive functioning.

A team of scientists from Chinese and US universities looked at the scores of math and verbal tests taken by Chinese citizens from the China Family Panel Studies longitudinal survey. They looked at repeated standardized tests given to the same individuals between 2010 and 2014, comparing how much air pollution participants were exposed to in the days before they took the test.

What counted as air pollution? Whether the pollutants sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and particles smaller than 10 micrometers in diameter were present in the air.

China is afflicted by severe air pollution. According to the World Health Organization, developing countries—including China—are home to the 20 most polluted cities in the world.

All told, then, researchers had good reason to be looking at pollutants’ effects on Chinese citizens. And the results were serious. A test taker who was exposed to more pollution had a significant drop in scores, compared to the test result if the exam was taken when exposed to less pollution; the average impact was equal to one year of education lost.

Not all participants were affected equally. As participants aged, the effects of air pollution increased, especially for men and test-takers with low levels of education. The significance extends beyond exam scores; cognitive decline is a risk factor for dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

As this study shows: when we pollute our air, no one wins.

Reviewers: Jonathan Raff, Indiana University;  Anthony Liu, Indiana University

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D: Has your brain been feeling foggy lately? Or maybe, smoggy? If you live somewhere affected by air pollution, there might be a connection. A recent study suggests that long-term exposure to pollutants in the air you breathe could negatively affect your cognitive functioning.

Y: A team of scientists from Chinese and US universities looked at the scores of math and verbal tests taken by Chinese citizens from the China Family Panel Studies longitudinal survey. They looked at repeated standardized tests given to the same individuals between 2010 and 2014, comparing how much air pollution participants were exposed to in the days before they took the test.

D: What counted as air pollution? Whether the pollutants sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and particles smaller than 10 micrometers in diameter were present in the air.

Y: Is China afflicted by severe air pollution? According to the World Health Organization, developing countries—including China—are home to the 20 most polluted cities in the world.

D: All told, then, researchers had good reason to be looking at pollutants’ effects on Chinese citizens. And the results were serious. A test taker who was exposed to more pollution had a significant drop in scores, compared to the test result if the exam was taken when exposed to less pollution; the average impact was equal to one year of education lost.

Y: Not all participants were affected equally. As participants aged, the effects of air pollution increased, especially for men and test-takers with low levels of education.

D: The significance extends beyond exam scores. Cognitive decline is a risk factor for dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. As this study shows: when we pollute our air, no one wins.