Speaking Well and Feeling Good: Age-Related Differences in the Affective Language of Resting State Thought

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY Affective science Pub Date : 2024-06-24 DOI:10.1007/s42761-024-00239-z
Teodora Stoica, Eric S. Andrews, Austin M. Deffner, Christopher Griffith, Matthew D. Grilli, Jessica R. Andrews-Hanna
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Abstract

Despite the prevalence and importance of resting state thought for daily functioning and psychological well-being, it remains unclear how such thoughts differ between young and older adults. Age-related differences in the affective tone of resting state thoughts, including the affective language used to describe them, could be a novel manifestation of the positivity effect, with implications for well-being. To examine this possibility, a total of 77 young adults (M = 24.9 years, 18–35 years) and 74 cognitively normal older adults (M = 68.6 years, 58–83 years) spoke their thoughts freely during a think-aloud paradigm across two studies. The emotional properties of spoken words and participants’ retrospective self-reported affective experiences were computed and examined for age differences and relationships with psychological well-being. Study 1, conducted before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, revealed that older adults exhibited more diversity of positive, but not negative, affectively tinged words compared to young adults and more positive self-reported thoughts. Despite being conducted virtually during the COVID-19 pandemic, study 2 replicated many of study 1’s findings, generalizing results across samples and study contexts. In an aggregated analysis of both samples, positive diversity predicted higher well-being beyond other metrics of affective tone, and the relationship between positive diversity and well-being was not moderated by age. Considering that older adults also exhibited higher well-being, these results hint at the possibility that cognitively healthy older adults’ propensity to experience more diverse positive concepts during natural periods of restful thought may partly underlie age-related differences in well-being and reveal a novel expression of the positivity effect.

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说得好,感觉好:静息状态思维情感语言中与年龄有关的差异。
尽管静息状态思维对日常功能和心理健康非常普遍和重要,但这种思维在年轻人和老年人之间有何不同仍不清楚。与年龄相关的静息状态思维情感基调的差异,包括用于描述静息状态思维的情感语言的差异,可能是积极效应的一种新的表现形式,并对幸福感产生影响。为了研究这种可能性,在两项研究中,共有 77 名年轻人(男 = 24.9 岁,18-35 岁)和 74 名认知正常的老年人(男 = 68.6 岁,58-83 岁)在思考-朗读范式中自由地说出了他们的想法。研究人员计算了口语的情感属性和参与者回顾性自我报告的情感体验,并考察了年龄差异以及与心理健康的关系。研究 1 是在 COVID-19 大流行开始前进行的,结果显示,与年轻人相比,老年人表现出更多积极的情感词汇,而不是消极的情感词汇,而且自我报告的想法也更积极。尽管研究 2 是在 COVID-19 大流行期间进行的,但研究 2 复制了研究 1 的许多发现,并在不同样本和研究环境中推广了研究结果。在对两个样本进行的综合分析中,积极多样性对幸福感的预测高于情感基调的其他指标,而且积极多样性与幸福感之间的关系不受年龄的影响。考虑到老年人也表现出较高的幸福感,这些结果暗示了这样一种可能性,即认知健康的老年人在自然的休息思考期间倾向于体验更多样的积极概念,这可能是幸福感中与年龄有关的差异的部分原因,并揭示了积极性效应的一种新的表现形式:在线版本包含补充材料,可在 10.1007/s42761-024-00239-z.上查阅。
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