在三项独立研究中,中老年乐观和悲观情绪的稳定性和变化。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-02-01 DOI:10.1037/pag0000789
Julia Tetzner, Johanna Drewelies, Sandra Duezel, Ilja Demuth, Gert G Wagner, Margie Lachman, Ulman Lindenberger, Nilam Ram, Denis Gerstorf
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引用次数: 0

摘要

心理学多个不同领域的研究早已表明,乐观和悲观可预测未来生活的一系列重要结果。尽管有大量文献对其相关性和后果进行了研究,但我们对乐观和悲观情绪在成年期和老年期的变化以及与个体差异相关的社会人口因素知之甚少。在本研究中,我们通过三个综合数据集对生活取向测验(Scheier & Carver,1985 年)的标准项目进行了(平行)分析:柏林老龄化研究 II(N = 1,423 人,60-88 岁;M = 70.4,SD = 3.70)和美国中年研究(N = 1,810 人,60-84 岁;M = 69.12,SD = 6.47)的两波数据,以及健康、老龄化和退休调查(N = 17,087 人,60-99 岁;M = 70.19,SD = 7.53)的横截面数据。通过使用潜在变化回归模型和局部加权平滑曲线发现,平均而言,60 岁以后的乐观情绪非常稳定,但《健康、老龄化和退休调查》中有一些证据表明,老年期的乐观情绪会降低。三项独立研究一致表明,悲观情绪平均增幅不大,每 10 年年龄增长 0.25 至 0.50 SD 不等。在所研究的社会人口因素中,教育水平越高,悲观情绪越低,而性别则与研究结果有更多的关联。我们的研究结果表明,与年龄相关的轨迹及其相关因素对乐观和悲观的影响是不同的。老年人在 60 岁时的乐观预期水平似乎一直保持到老年,而悲观情绪仅略有增加。我们将讨论这些发现的可能原因。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
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Stability and change of optimism and pessimism in late midlife and old age across three independent studies.

Research across a number of different areas in psychology has long shown that optimism and pessimism are predictive of a number of important future life outcomes. Despite a vast literature on the correlates and consequences, we know very little about how optimism and pessimism change across adulthood and old age and the sociodemographic factors that are associated with individual differences in such trajectories. In the present study, we conducted (parallel) analyses of standard items from the Life Orientation Test (Scheier & Carver, 1985) in three comprehensive data sets: Two-wave data from both the Berlin Aging Study II (N = 1,423, aged 60-88; M = 70.4, SD = 3.70) and the Midlife in the U.S. Study (N = 1,810 aged 60-84; M = 69.12, SD = 6.47) as well as cross-sectional data from the Survey of Health, Aging, and Retirement (N = 17,087, aged 60-99; M = 70.19, SD = 7.53). Using latent change-regression models and locally weighted smoothing curves revealed that optimism is on average very stable after age 60, with some evidence in Survey of Health, Aging, and Retirement of lowered optimism in very old age. Consistent across the three independent studies, pessimism evinced on average modest increases, ranging between .25 and .50 SD per 10 years of age. Of the sociodemographic factors examined, higher levels of education revealed the most consistent associations with lower pessimism, whereas gender evinced more study-specific findings. We take our results to demonstrate that age-related trajectories and correlates thereof differ for optimism and pessimism. Older adults appear to preserve into older ages those levels of optimistic expectations they have had at 60 years of age and show only modest increases in pessimism. We discuss possible reasons for these findings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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