Literature DB >> 19891749

Seeking pleasure and seeking pain: differences in prohedonic and contra-hedonic motivation from adolescence to old age.

Michaela Riediger1, Florian Schmiedek, Gert G Wagner, Ulman Lindenberger.   

Abstract

Using a mobile-phone-based experience-sampling technology in a sample of 378 individuals ranging from 14 to 86 years of age, we investigated age differences in how people want to influence their feelings in their daily lives. Contra-hedonic motivations of wanting either to maintain or enhance negative affect or to dampen positive affect were most prevalent in adolescence, whereas prohedonic motivations of wanting either to maintain, but not enhance, positive affect or to dampen negative affect were most prevalent in old age. This pattern was mirrored by an age-related increase in self-reported day-to-day emotional well-being. Analyses of the emotional experiences that accompanied prohedonic and contra-hedonic motivations are consistent with the notions that contra-hedonic motivations are more likely to serve utilitarian than hedonic functions, and that people are more likely to be motivated to maintain negative affect when it is accompanied by positive affect. Implications for understanding affective development are discussed.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19891749     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2009.02473.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  60 in total

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5.  Same old, same old? Age differences in the diversity of daily life.

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Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2019-10-14

6.  Aging, Attention and Situation Selection: Older Adults Create Mixed Emotional Environments.

Authors:  Derek M Isaacowitz; Kathryn L Ossenfort
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7.  Age differences in managing response to sadness elicitors using attentional deployment, positive reappraisal and suppression.

Authors:  Monika Lohani; Derek M Isaacowitz
Journal:  Cogn Emot       Date:  2013-11-08

8.  Selectivity as an Emotion Regulation Strategy: Lessons from Older Adults.

Authors:  Tamara Sims; Candice Hogan; Laura Carstensen
Journal:  Curr Opin Psychol       Date:  2015-06-01

9.  Regulating for a reason: Emotion regulation goals are linked to spontaneous strategy use.

Authors:  Lameese Eldesouky; Tammy English
Journal:  J Pers       Date:  2018-12-18

10.  Amygdala functional connectivity with medial prefrontal cortex at rest predicts the positivity effect in older adults' memory.

Authors:  Michiko Sakaki; Lin Nga; Mara Mather
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2013-03-26       Impact factor: 3.225

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