Brothers Allyson, Gabrian Martina, Wahl Hans-Werner, Diehl Manfred
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Colorado State University.
Department of Psychological Aging Research, Heidelberg University.
Psychol Aging. 2016 Sep;31(6):605-17. doi: 10.1037/pag0000101. Epub 2016 May 30.
This study examined how 2 distinct facets of perceived personal lifetime-future time perspective (FTP) and awareness of age-related change (AARC)-are associated with another, and how they may interact to predict psychological well-being. To better understand associations among subjective perceptions of lifetime, aging, and well-being, we tested a series of models to investigate questions of directionality, indirect effects, and conditional processes among FTP, AARC-Gains, AARC-Losses, and psychological well-being. In all models, we tested for differences between middle-aged and older adults, and between adults from the United States and Germany. Analyses were conducted within a structural equation modeling framework on a cross-national, 2.5-year longitudinal sample of 537 community-residing adults (age 40-98 years). Awareness of age-related losses (AARC-Losses) at Time 1 predicted FTP at Time 2, but FTP did not predict AARC-Gains or AARC-Losses. Furthermore, future time perspective mediated the association between AARC-Losses and well-being. Moderation analyses revealed a buffering effect of awareness of age-related gains (AARC-Gains) in which perceptions of more age-related gains diminished the negative effect of a limited future time perspective on well-being. Effects were robust across age groups and countries. Taken together, these findings suggest that perceived age-related loss experiences may sensitize individuals to perceive a more limited future lifetime which may then lead to lower psychological well-being. In contrast, perceived age-related gains may function as a resource to preserve psychological well-being, in particular when time is perceived as running out. (PsycINFO Database Record
本研究考察了感知到的个人一生未来时间观(FTP)的两个不同方面与年龄相关变化意识(AARC)之间是如何相互关联的,以及它们如何相互作用来预测心理健康。为了更好地理解一生、衰老和幸福的主观认知之间的关联,我们测试了一系列模型,以研究FTP、AARC-收获、AARC-损失和心理健康之间的方向性、间接效应和条件过程问题。在所有模型中,我们测试了中年人和老年人之间以及美国和德国成年人之间的差异。分析是在结构方程建模框架内,对537名社区居住成年人(年龄40 - 98岁)的跨国2.5年纵向样本进行的。时间1时的年龄相关损失意识(AARC-损失)预测了时间2时的FTP,但FTP并未预测AARC-收获或AARC-损失。此外,未来时间观介导了AARC-损失与幸福之间的关联。调节分析揭示了年龄相关收获意识(AARC-收获)的缓冲效应,即更多年龄相关收获的认知减少了有限未来时间观对幸福的负面影响。这些效应在不同年龄组和国家中都很稳健。综上所述,这些发现表明,感知到的与年龄相关的损失经历可能会使个体更敏感地察觉到未来寿命更有限,进而可能导致较低的心理健康水平。相比之下,感知到的与年龄相关的收获可能作为一种资源来维持心理健康,特别是当感觉时间不多的时候。(PsycINFO数据库记录)