1 / 24

Personality & Aging

Personality & Aging. “ an entity of the sort you are referring to when you use the first person pronoun ‘I’ ” (Adams, 1954). “what a person really is ” (Allport, 1937). ... a distinctive pattern of behaviour, thought and emotion that characterizes each person’s response to life situations.

xenos
Download Presentation

Personality & Aging

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Personality & Aging “an entity of the sort you are referring to when you use the first person pronoun ‘I’ ”(Adams, 1954) “what a person really is”(Allport, 1937) ... a distinctive pattern of behaviour, thought and emotion that characterizes each person’s response to life situations • unconscious motives or overt behaviour? • questionnaires, projective tests, interview • Personality type = several characteristics

  2. Continuity or Change? Levels of Personality Structure/Function (McAdams, 1994) (1) Dispositional Traits • consistent across contexts • continuum/degrees of the characteristic (2) Personal Concerns • goals, life concerns, development, motivation (3) Life Narrative • everything together, creation of identity  potential for growth (1)  (3)

  3. Dispositions & Trait Approach Principles of Trait Approach • comparisons of individuals • distinctive qualities / behaviours • stable • not necessarily specific behaviours • expression = trait x event • same trait, different behaviours • global description

  4. McCrae & Costa’s 5 Factor Model Neuroticism: (a) hostility, anger, self-consciousness, depression  emotions (b) impulsiveness, vulnerability  behav. Extraversion: (a) warmth, gregariousness assertiveness  interpersonal traits (b) activity, excitement seeking, positive emotions  temperamental traits Openness to Experience: ideas, fantasy, aesthetics actions, values Agreeableness:quality of interpersonal interactions Conscientiousness: degree of organisation, persistence, motivation in goal-directed behav.

  5. Research Using the 5 Factor Model • traits stable over developmental course • main features built-in at birth • interaction of core potential and environment • great change from 5-13 yrs, settling from • 21-31 yrs, stable from age 30! • similar findings in other studies, in other • locations, by other researchers • traits don’t change but roles, behaviours and • situations change with age • cohort differences:  introversion, rigidity • and inflexibility in older cohorts

  6. BUT .. lots of things change after age 30! Masculinity/Femininity • less differentiated in late life • men  nurturing, expressive qualities • woman  assertiveness, more dominant Turning Inwardness controversial! •  interiority w/ age - tendency to become more • preoccupied w/ feelings, experiences, cognition BUT • stability of introversion-extraversion trait

  7. Locus of Control • internal LOC =  psychological adjustment • active  passive mastery w/ age • at 40 - in control, at 60 - not in control • mixed results: , , and stability w/ age • may be dependent on variable examined •  internal LOC w/ intellectual functioning, • health and personal development • institutionalisation - mixed results • not ‘in control’ but ‘under control’

  8. Problems/Concerns with Trait Approach • low test-retest items not included in inventory • validity of self-report technique • person = set of scores ??? • core/essential aspects of human nature? • no causal explanations of behaviour • ignores sociocultural context of development

  9. Personal Concerns & Stage Approach Personal concerns • what people want at different times in life • strategies, defenses; not reducible to traits Stage Theories • qualitative, upward progression thru stages • little empirical data, strong theoretical basis Carl Jung • introversion increased w/ age • release of suppressed gender-related aspects

  10. Erik Erikson’s 8 Stage of Man • interaction btwn inner maturational plan and • external societal demands  dialectical • epigenetic principle • stage = psychosocial crisis, 2 opposing forces • resolution of crisis  ego strengthened • social world widens with each stage • defeated qualities don’t disappear, • balance shifts • trust  identity  concern for next generation •  integrity

  11. Erik Erikson’s 8 Stage of Man • trust vs. mistrust • autonomy vs. shame • initiative vs. guilt • industry vs. inferiority • identity vs. confusion • intimacy vs. isolation • generativity vs. stagnation • integrity vs. despair

  12. Expanding Notions on Generativity 5 Types of Generativity (Kotre, 1984) • biological/parental • technical • cultural • agentic • communal

  13. McAdams and colleagues • 7 components: demand, desire, concern, belief, • commitment, action, narration • in young, middle-aged, older adults measured: • concern for welfare of future generations • commitment: typical strivings in daily life • generative actions or behaviours performed • narrations: autobiographical recollections • concern, action: middle-age > older • commitment, narration: middle-age = older

  14. Loevinger’s Theory of Ego Development • 6 stages observed in adults: • conformist • conscientious-conformist • conscientious • individualistic • autonomous • integrated • more empirically based stage theory • i.e., Sentence Completion Test • framework for examining relationship btwn • cognitive development and ego development

  15. 65 Late adult transition 60 Culmination of mid adulthood 55 Age 50 transition 50 Enter mid-adulthd 45 Midlife transition Settling down 40 33 Age 30 transition 28 Enter adult world 22 Early adult transition 17 Childhood/Adoles. Life Transitions: Levinson’s Framework Late adulthood

  16. Life Transitions: The Midlife Crisis • realisation of unfulfilled ambitions, worry • re: relationships, limited prospects • devastating experience or positive transition • media hype  research not very supportive • no strong evidence for this in women • time of gains and losses built on shakier ground do not occur to everyone, at specific ages

  17. Life Narratives, Identity & The Self McAdams’ Life Story Model Life story = internalized narrative w/ beginning, middle and anticipated ending • narrative tone: emotional feel • imagery: sights, sounds, symbols, metaphors • themes: patterns of motivational content • ideological settings: beliefs, values, ideology • nuclear episodes: key scenes • characters: idealizations of the self • ending: legacy

  18. Whitbourne’s Identity Theory Life-span construct = person’s life vs expectations 2 structural components: (1) Scenario expectations about the future • influenced by cultural norms • create a social clock (2) Life Story personal narrative history that coherently organizes past events • personal meaning, continuity • distortions make it acceptable to oneself

  19. Assimilation Accommodation Whitbourne’s Model of Identity Development Identity Experiences • sources of identity: family, work • transitions as needed, when needed

  20. Self-Concept • organized, coherent, integrated • patterns of self-perceptions Labouvie-Vief et al. (1995) • assessed self-representations in 11-85 yr. olds • spontaneous accounts of themselves • < 20 yrs.  undifferentiated representations • midlife  highly differentiated • late life  less differentiated

  21. Mortimer et al. (1982) • 14 yr. study with male college freshmen • 4 dimension of self-image: • well-being • interpersonal qualities • well-being • unconventionality • as a group, stable structure of self-concept • some fluctuation along dimensions • intra-individually, related to life events

  22. Possible Selves • ideas about different people we • could become in the future Cross & Markus (1991) • hoped-for selves: • 18-20  family concerns • 25-39  personal issues • 40-59  family issues • 60-86  personal issues • feared-selves: physical issues important • 2 young grps  becoming unattractive • 2 older grps  fear of inability for self-care

  23. Ryff (1991) • possible selves to define well-being • 6 dimensions of well-being: • self-acceptance • positive relations with others • autonomy • environmental mastery • purpose in life • personal growth • past, present, future and ideal self-perceptions • of young, middle-age and older adults

  24. Ryff (1991) cont’d ... • young, middle-aged, more accepting of ideal • and future selves than past or present • differences btwn ideal and present self-ratings • diminish with age

More Related