Differential age trajectories of positive and negative affect: further evidence from the berlin aging study
The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences; 63(5): 261-70.
by Defining Wisdom grantee Ute Kunzmann
In cross-sectional and longitudinal samples from the Berlin Aging
Study, fellow researchers and I examined performance-based and
self-evaluative indicators of functioning in two realms as predictors
of individual differences and intraindividual changes in positive and
negative affect. Cross-sectional and longitudinal structural equation
models suggested that performance-based indicators (level of social
involvement and test intelligence) were associated with positive
affect, but not with negative affect. Evaluative indicators
(self-reported quality of social life and mental fitness) showed
stronger relations to negative affect than to positive affect. The
present evidence provides an explanation for the differential stability
of positive versus negative affect in old age: Positive affect may
decline because it requires objective competencies, which seem to
decrease in old age. Negative affect may remain stable because it is
associated with self-evaluations, which seem to change less with age.
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