Title: Psychology of aging. Lecture 7: Personality and emotions.
1Psychology of aging.Lecture 7 Personality and
emotions.
2Personality and age
- Development or stability?
3Stage v trait theories
- Is personality complete by the end of childhood
(Freud)? - Trait theories
- Focus on individual differences
- Or does development continue (Jung)?
- Stage theories
- Focus on common experiences
4Trait theories of personality
- Dispositional traits
- Based on comparing individuals
- Stability over time
5MacCrae Costa 5 factor model of personality
- Five dimensions of personality
- Neuroticism (N)
- Extraversion (E)
- Openness (O)
- Agreeableness (A)
- Conscientiousness (C)
- Evidence self-ratings, language, other-ratings
- Personality stable from age 30
- Evidence self-ratings and spouse-ratings.
6Aging effects on Big 5 personality traits
- Baltimore Longitudinal Study
- Personality structure same young/old
- Rank ordering similar over many years
- E.g. neuroticism, 12-year stability 0.82.
- Mean levels do show some change
- Slight decreases extraversion
- Neuroticism some people increase, some decrease
- Openness to experience decreases
7Longitudinal studies Rank ordering and mean
levels over time.
extraversion
Time3
Time1
Time2
8Cross sectional evidence on traits
- Cross-sectional evidence
- Older adults lower than young in
- Neuroticism, extraversion, openness
- Older adults higher than young in
- Agreeableness, conscientiousness
- Differences occur early mid adulthood
- Evidence of generational changes in anxiety
9Critiques of 5 factor model
- Role of sociocultural context
- Personality traits not strong predictors of
behaviour - Problems in using self-assessment questionnaires
to assess personality - Social desirability
- Social comparison processes.
- Need to look more at individual rather than group
level
10Stage theories of personality
- Continued personality development across the
lifespan - Emphasis on common stages e.g. midlife crisis
- e.g. Shakespeares 7 ages of man
11Jung Stages of adulthood
- Continued development of personality
- Shift from social to spiritual needs
- Become more introverted with age
- Decrease in gender-stereotyped behaviour
- E.g. women may behave increasingly in ways
perceived as masculine as they age
12Kansas City Studies, 1960s
- Cumming Henry
- Disengagement theory.
- From mid-50s less involved with world
- Blurring of male female roles in old age.
- Problems
- Rely on projective tests
- Selective withdrawal
13Erikson psychosocial development
- 8 psychosocial stages with specific conflict at
each stage. - Must resolve for successful development
- In adulthood generativity v stagnation
- Evidence that successful generativity relates to
well-being in mid-life. - In old age ego integrity v despair
14Critique of stage theories
- Often broad, non-specific and untestable
- Evidence based on small samples
- Highly selective
- Often men only
- Assume life-stages the same for everyone
- Absence of mid-life crisis for most people
- Ignores individual differences
15Experience and perception of emotions in old age
16Socioemotional selectivity theory Carstensen
- Young adults
- Focus on future-orientated goals
- Seeking information
- Developing new relationships
- Older focus more on
- Limited time perspective so focus on goals in the
present - Maximise experience of positive emotion
- Engaging in positive social interactions.
17Age and social and emotional regulation
- Socioemotional selectivity predicts that older
adults will - Choose situations which will maximise positive
emotions - Attend more to, and remember more, positive
information - Reappraise situations in a more positive way
- Regulate emotions to emphasize the positive
18Memory for emotional material
- Mather et al. (2003)
- Participants shown positive negative pictures
- Results
- Young remembered more negative pictures than old
- No age difference for positive pictures
- Conclude old inhibit negative info and divert
attention to positive info.
19Experience and regulation of emotions.
- No age difference in life satisfaction
- US, China, Nigeria.
- Lawton
- Older people more content, less anxiety
- Very old age feel more calm, high sense of
self-efficacy - Regulation of emotions
- Old report better control of emotions such as
anger than young
20Age and emotional processing.
- Perception of others emotional state
21Perception of emotions and age
- Life experience theories
- Older adults more experience of emotions.
- Predicts older adults better at decoding others
emotional states. - Neuropsychological theories
- Areas of brain most affected by age
- Frontal lobes, limbic system
- Also involved in emotion decoding
- Predicts older adults worse at decoding others
emotional states.
22Age effects on emotion perception
- Ruffman et al. (2008) meta-analysis
- Older adults much worse at identifying
- anger, fear, sadness
- Smaller age effect in identifying
- surprise, happiness
- Support neuropsychological theory?
- Changes in frontal and limbic regions?
- Or socio-emotional selectivity?
- Avoid negative emotions?
23Conclusions
- Personality and age
- Individual stability in personality
- Some developmental changes related to personal
experiences - Socioemotional selectivity theory
- Older adult focused on current emotions.
- Emotions, older adults
- Better experience and control of emotions
- Poorer at remembering and interpreting negative
emotional information
24Questions
- 1) Evaluate the idea that personality develops in
ordered stages throughout adulthood. - 2) Are personality traits stable across the
lifespan? - 3) Outline Carstensens socioemotional
selectivity theory and the implications it has
for aging and emotions. - 4) Do older adults have a experience more
negative emotions than young? - 5) Are older adults better or worse than young at
perceiving and remembering emotional material?