AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates emotional aging through the lens of socioemotional selectivity theory, exploring how older adults prioritize positive emotions over negative ones.
  • It uses a computational model (MIVA) to analyze everyday emotional experiences across a range of ages (14-86) with findings showing mixed support for SST, including unexpected trends in emotional dispositional anchoring.
  • The results suggest younger adults may have a more positive emotional disposition, while older adults regulate emotions elicited by unpleasant events more strongly, prompting a need to refine SST's foundational concepts.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Emotional aging research is dominated by the idea of age-related improvements that result from shifts in motivation. Socioemotional selectivity theory (SST) proposes that as individuals age, they increasingly favor emotion-related goals and savor positive but avoid negative emotions. Previous age-comparative studies on everyday emotional experience typically were descriptive or studied the processes underlying emotional experience in isolation. We aimed at a more holistic approach to test hypotheses derived from SST regarding age-related differences in general emotional dispositions (i.e., anchoring), emotional reactivity, and emotion regulation by using a computational approach.

Methods: We applied our Model of Intraindividual Variability in Affect (MIVA) to data on everyday emotional experiences in an age-diverse sample (N = 378, age range 14-86 years). Parameter estimations were carried out within a Bayesian framework.

Results: Our results provide partial support for predictions derived from SST. Unexpectedly, anchoring showed a negative age trend, indicating a more positive affect disposition in younger, not older adults. Reactions to pleasant events showed no age trend. Reactivity to unpleasant events was highest in midlife and lower for younger and older adults. Consistent with SST, affect elicited by pleasant events was regulated less strongly by older adults and affect elicited by unpleasant events more strongly.

Discussion: As our results provide only partial support for SST, we revisit the phenomena that are at its foundations and provide suggestions on how to refine the theory.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbad033DOI Listing

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