New research by the Universities of Exeter and 
Writing in Scientific American Mind, the researchers from the Universities of Exeter, Queensland and 
Commenting on this work, Professor Alex Haslam of the 
These conclusions are based a number of recent studies which were reviewed in the article and presented at the Science Festival. These included:
- A 2008 study      (published in Neuropsychological Rehabilitation) of stroke      sufferers. This showed that being able to maintain valued group      memberships played as important a role in positive recovery as an ability      to overcome cognitive difficulties (e.g., problems with memory and      language). After their stroke, people's life satisfaction increased by 12%      for every group membership that they were able to retain.
- A 2009      study (in press at Ageing and Society) of residents entering a      new care home. This showed that those who participated as a group in      decisions related to the decoration of communal areas used those areas 57%      more over the next month and were far happier as a result. In contrast,      the use of space by residents in a control group declined by 60%.      Moreover, these differences were still apparent three months later.
- Another      2009 study (under review at Psychology and Aging) looked at the      impact of group interventions on the health and well-being of 73 people      residing in care. After a period of six weeks the researchers found that      people who took part in a reminiscence group showed a 12% increase in      their memory performance, while those who received individual reminiscence      or a control intervention showed no change.
- Another      2009 study (in press at the Journal of Clinical and Experimental      Neuropsychology) also studied nursing home residents and looked at      the relationship between their sense of identity and well-being and the      severity of their dementia. The study's key finding was that a strong      sense of identity associated with perceived membership of social groups,      was a much better predictor of residents' well-being than their level of      dementia.
Summarizing this and other work in the article, Professor Jolanda Jetten from the 
Dr Catherine Haslam of the 
 
 
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