| Literature DB >> 21151516 |
Molly Maxfield1, Sheldon Solomon, Tom Pyszczynski, Jeff Greenberg.
Abstract
Research has shown that reminders of mortality lead people to engage in defenses to minimize the anxiety such thoughts could arouse. In accord with this notion, younger adults reminded of mortality engage in behaviors aimed at denying vulnerability to death. However, little is known about the effects of mortality reminders on older adults. The present study examined the effect of reminders of death on older adults' subjective life expectancy. Mortality reminders did not significantly impact the life expectancy estimates of old-old adults. Reminders of death did however lead to shorter life expectancy estimates among young-old participants low in neuroticism but longer life expectancy estimates among young-old participants high in neuroticism, suggesting that this group was most defensive in response to reminders of death.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21151516 PMCID: PMC2997504 DOI: 10.4061/2010/260123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Res ISSN: 2090-2204
Demographic information and individual differences.
| Young-Old | Old-Old | Overall | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| |
| Age* | 66.38 (3.62) | 77.68 (3.91) | 71.44 (6.77) |
| Gender (% Female) | 60 (81%) | 48 (80%) | 108 (81%) |
| Neuroticism | 7.39 (4.67) | 8.48 (5.20) | 7.88 (4.92) |
| Self-esteem* | 3.92 (.46) | 3.64 (.60) | 3.80 (.54) |
| Positive affect | 3.28 (.67) | 3.18 (.71) | 3.23 (.69) |
| Negative affect* | 1.29 (.38) | 1.49 (.49) | 1.38 (.44) |
* indicates age differences ≤.01.
Figure 1Life expectancy estimates as a function of mortality salience and neuroticism among old-old adults. Note that scores indicate estimated remaining years to live.
Figure 2Life expectancy estimates as a function of mortality salience and neuroticism among young-old adults. Note that scores indicate estimated remaining years to live.