%0 Journal Article %J Psychology and Aging %D 2020 %T Adverse childhood experiences and domain-specific cognitive function in a population-based study of older adults in rural South Africa %A Kobayashi, Lindsay C %A Farrell, Meagan T %A Payne, Collin F %A Sumaya Mall %A Montana, Livia %A Wagner, Ryan G %A Kahn, Kathleen %A Tollman, Stephen %A Berkman, Lisa F %X Research on early life adversity and later-life cognitive function is conflicting, with little evidence from low-income settings. We investigated associations between adverse childhood experiences and cognitive function in an older population who grew up under racial segregation during South African apartheid. Data were from 1,871 adults aged 40–79 in the population-representative “Health and Ageing in Africa: A Longitudinal Study of an INDEPTH Community in South Africa” in 2015. The adverse childhood experiences were having a parent unemployed for > 6 months; having parents who argued or fought often; having a parent who drank excessively, used drugs, or had mental health problems; and physical abuse from parents. Executive function, language, visuospatial ability, and memory were assessed with the Oxford Cognitive Screen-Plus, a validated cognitive assessment designed for low-income, low-literacy settings. We estimated associations between adverse childhood experiences and latent cognitive domain z-scores using multiple-indicator, multiple-cause structural equation models. Childhood adversities were reported by 15% (parental unemployment for > 6 months), 25% (parents argued or fought often), 25% (a parent drank excessively, used drugs, or had mental health problems), and 35% (physical abuse from parent) of respondents. They were not associated with cognition, except that having a parent who drank excessively, used drugs, or had mental health problems was associated with lower memory z-scores (−0.07; 95% CI [−0.13, −0.01]). This is one of the first investigations into later-life cognitive outcomes associated with early adversity in a population with a historical context of pervasive trauma, and suggests that later-life memory may be vulnerable to early adversity. %B Psychology and Aging %V online %G eng %U https://doi.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fpag0000552