Literature DB >> 21823797

Still young at heart: negative age-related information motivates distancing from same-aged people.

David Weiss1, Alexandra M Freund.   

Abstract

Research on subjective age has shown that most older adults feel significantly younger than their chronological age. One of the proposed mechanisms for this subjective age effect is that distancing oneself from an age group that is associated with decline in functioning helps older adults maintain a positive view of themselves. Providing negative age-related information, then, should lead older adults to direct their attention away from stimuli that remind them of their age and to distance themselves from same-aged people. In 2 experiments (N₁ = 78, 65-83 years of age, M = 71.67, SD = 4.81; N₂ = 98, 65-87 years of age, M = 70.52, SD = 4.89), older adults were confronted with positive, neutral, or negative age-related information. The salience of age increased after receiving negative age-related information. Furthermore, older adults directed their gaze away from pictures of older adults and looked longer at middle-aged adults after being confronted with negative age-related information. In addition, Study 2 showed that negative age-related information led older adults to distance themselves from same-aged people. Moreover, they perceived themselves as being more similar to middle-aged than to older adults. These findings highlight the motivational processes that might contribute to the discrepancy between chronological and subjective age in older adults and the psychological function of this discrepancy. Feeling younger might allow older adults to maintain a positive view of themselves despite age-related losses.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21823797     DOI: 10.1037/a0024819

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Aging        ISSN: 0882-7974


  17 in total

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5.  High-quality relationships strengthen the benefits of a younger subjective age across adulthood.

Authors:  Katherine S Zee; David Weiss
Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2019-05

6.  What Determines That Older Adults Feel Younger Than They Are? Results From a Nationally Representative Study in Germany.

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7.  Discrepancy between chronological age and felt age: age group difference in objective and subjective health as correlates.

Authors:  Namkee G Choi; Diana M DiNitto; Jinseok Kim
Journal:  J Aging Health       Date:  2014-02-28

8.  Felt age and cognitive-affective depressive symptoms in late life.

Authors:  Namkee G Choi; Diana M DiNitto
Journal:  Aging Ment Health       Date:  2014-02-18       Impact factor: 3.658

9.  Personality, self-rated health, and subjective age in a life-span sample: the moderating role of chronological age.

Authors:  Yannick Stephan; Virginie Demulier; Antonio Terracciano
Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2012-05-14

10.  Assessment of Karnofsky (KPS) and WHO (WHO-PS) performance scores in brain tumour patients: the role of clinician bias.

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