“…In individuals with healthy cognitive functioning, these mechanisms contribute to the adaptation of brain activity when the task difficulty level is increased and thereby enhance cognitive performance [4]. Empirically corroborating the predictions of the cognitive reserve concept, both correlational and causal evidence showed that longer education in early life, cognitively demanding occupation in midlife, and cognitive leisure activity in midlife and old age contribute to the buildup of cognitive reserve during the life course and are related to better cognitive functioning such as memory and executive functioning in old age [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. …”