Air Pollution can Damage our Intelligence, Study Finds

Exposure to air pollution may impede cognitive ability as people become older, with less-educated men the worst affected, a new study has found.

"Most existing research on air pollution focuses on its health effects," study author Xiaobo Zhang told Euronews. "Our study shows a persistent negative effect on cognitive health, which not been widely discussed."

Researchers from Beijing's Peking University and Yale University observed the maths and verbal skills of nearly 32,000 people in China over a period of four years, comparing the results to air pollution exposure, calculated from official air pollution index values.

"Long-term exposure to air pollution impedes cognitive performance in verbal and math tests," said study author Xiaobo Zhang, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) senior research fellow and professor of economics at Peking University, in a statement.

The decline in verbal scores was more marked among males and became more pronounced with age, the study showed.

Those who did not have a middle school education also showed a greater decrease in their verbal scores compared to those who did.

"The damage air pollution has on ageing brains likely imposes substantial health and economic cost, considering that cognitive functioning is critical for the elderly in both running daily errands and making high-stakes economic decisions," said Zhang.

Cognitive decline or impairment in the elderly are also risk factors for Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia.

Researchers used measurements of sulphur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and particulates smaller than 10 micrometres in diameter in areas where their cohort lived in their comparisons — ozone, carbon monoxide along with larger particulates...

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