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Lucila Falballa

Lucila Falballa

Kartei Details

Karten 360
Sprache Deutsch
Kategorie Psychologie
Stufe Grundschule
Erstellt / Aktualisiert 02.01.2013 / 26.07.2022
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3. Cognitive development (middle adulthood)
  • types of intelligence

 

  1.  decrease in fluid intelligence (fluide oder mechanische Intelligenz; ability to perceive and manipulate information, e.g. abstract reasoning)
  2. increase (or stability) in crystallized intelligence (kristalline oder pragmatische Intelligenz; accumulated skills, knowledge, language)

3. Cognitive development (middle adulthood)

  • importance of longitudinal (over cross-sectional) exploration methods

  • confounding of cohort effects

3. Cognitive development (middle adulthood)

  • Seattle longitudinal study (Schaie, 1996)

 

  • includes 500 adults (from 1956 on)
  • main results: [13.18-19]
  • perceptual speed … starts to decline in early adulthood
  • numerical ability … starts do decline in middle age
  • vocabulary, verbal memory, inductive reasoning, and spatial orientation  show peak performance in middle age

3. Cognitive development (middle adulthood)

  • information processing

 

  • slower processing speed
  • decreases in memory performance (mixed results)
  • lower working memory capacity
  • emergence of expertise

 

4. Careers, work, and leisure (middle adulthood)
  • time of evaluation and reflection about one’s work and career

 

  • typically peak of position and earning in middle age
  • adjusting idealistic hopes to realistic possibilities

4. Careers, work, and leisure (middle adulthood)

  • adaptation to ever more rapidly changing work situations

 

  • globalization (e.g. higher pressure, language skills)
  • flexibility (e.g., commuting; Pendeln)
  • new technologies (machines, computers, Internet)

 

1. Personality theories and development      

(middle adulthood)

1.1 Stages of adulthood

  • Erikson’s (1968) stage 7:

 

  • generativity vs. stagnation (or self-absorption)
  • goal of leaving legacies (Hinterlassenschaft) to the next generation (kind of immortality; Unsterblichkeit)

types: biological, parental, work, and cultural

 

1. Personality theories and development      

(middle adulthood)

1.1 Stages of adulthood

  • Levinson’s (1978) seasons of a man’s life

 

  • series of periods with specific tasks and transition periods in between
  • evaluation: collected data only from retrospective interviews, no statistics

 

1. Personality theories and development      

(middle adulthood)

1.1 Stages of adulthood

  • Midlife Crisis

 

  • generally rather no; much interindividual variation
  • too much emphasis on crises in stage theories

 

1. Personality theories and development      

(middle adulthood)

 

1.2 The life-events approach
  • theoretical assumptions

 

  • influence of life-events (like marriage, children, widowhood) on personality
  • mediating factors (like physical health, family support)
  • role of adaptation process (appraisal and coping; Bewertung und Bewältigung)

 

1. Personality theories and development      

(middle adulthood)

1.2 The life-events approach

  • evaluation

 

  • too much emphasis on change, neglecting stability
  • focussing on major events, not on daily hassles (Ärgernisse) and stress

 

1. Personality theories and development      

(middle adulthood)

1.2 The life-events approach

 

  • changes from young to middle-aged adults
1. in stress perception 2. personal control

 

1. in stress perception

  • less daily stressors
  • interpersonal tension as the most frequent daily stressor
  • more „overload“ stress

 

2. personal control

 

  • general decrease in feeling of personal control (esp. sex and children)
  • increase of control over finance, work, and marriage

 

2. Stability and change (middle adulthood) 2.1 Cross-sectional studies  

 

  • Big 5“ personality factors (Costa & McCrae, 1998) 
  • some age-related changes in cross-sectional data (McCrae et al., 1999)

2. Stability and change (middle adulthood)

2.2 Longitudinal studies

  • Baltimore Study

 

Baltimore study (ca. 1,000 persons, 20 to 96 years old, starting in 1950s)
  • considerable stability across the adult years (Costa & McCrae, 1992)

 

2. Stability and change (middle adulthood)

2.2 Longitudinal studies

  • meta-analysis of 94 studies (Roberts et al., 2006) found more changes

 

1. neuroticism decreased (emotional stability increased) in early adulthood 2. extraversion should be split into social dominance (assertiveness [Durchsetzungsvermögen], dominance) and social vitality (talkativeness [Redseligkeit], sociability [Geselligkeit]) a. social dominance increased from adolescence through middle adulthood b. social vitality increased in adolescence, then decreased in early and late adulthood 3. openness increased in adolescence and early adulthood, decreased in late adulthood 4. agreeableness [Veträglichkeit] increased in early and middle adulthood 5. conscientiousness [Gewissenhaftigkeit] dto.

 

2. Stability and change (middle adulthood)

2.2 Longitudinal studies

  • Berkeley studies (ca. 500 children and parents, starting in late 1920s)

 

  • most stability in intellectual orientation and openness
  • most changes in nurturant/hostile [unterstützend/feindselig] and self-confidence [falsch in Santrock!]

2. Stability and change (middle adulthood)

2.3 Conclusion

  • developmental trends

 

– not everything in personality becomes fixed in adulthood – but changes are usually small – stability peaks in one’s 50s and 60s

 

2. Stability and change (middle adulthood)

2.3 Conclusion

  • cumulative personality model

 

  • cumulative personality model (with experience, people become more apt [angepasst] in interacting with their environment, thus promoting stability of personality)

 

3. Close relationships (middle adulthood) 3.1 Love and marriage at midlife
  • change from romantic to companionate love

 

  • change from romantic to companionate love [cf. Chap. 12]
  • importance of security, loyalty, and mutual emotional interest

 

3. Close relationships (middle adulthood) 3.1 Love and marriage at midlife
  • pattern of marital satisfaction
  • reasons and consequences of divorce

 

  • pattern of marital satisfaction 

reasons and consequences of divorce:

  • initiation more by women (66%) than by men (41%)
  • gender-specific causes for divorce 
  • consequences depend on several factors (e.g., age, length of marriage, children)
  • women (44%) more often fear financial problems than men do (11%)
  • ¾ of divorcees (Geschiedene) later approve their decision

 

3. Close relationships (middle adulthood) 3.2 Children leaving home

 

  • increasingly later age of children’s moving out („Hotel Mama“) 
  • empty-nest syndrome, need for adjustment
  • increasing number of returning children (B2B = Back-to-Bedroom)

 

3. Close relationships (middle adulthood) 3.2 Children leaving home

 

  • increasingly later age of children’s moving out („Hotel Mama“) 
  • empty-nest syndrome, need for adjustment
  • increasing number of returning children (B2B = Back-to-Bedroom)

3. Close relationships (middle adulthood)

3.3 Grandparenting, possible roles and function

 

  • grandmothers more involved with grandchildren than grandfathers
  • possible roles and functions
– biological reward and continuity – emotional self-fulfillment, companionship, and       satisfaction – remote role

 

3. Close relationships (middle adulthood)

3.3 Grandparenting

 

 

  • cultural differences in grandparents’ roles
  • increasing number of children living with their grandparents
– from 2.3 mill (in 1980) to 6.1 mill (in 2005) – caused by child’s mother’s problems (like drug use, adolescent pregnancy, divorce, low income, delinquency)

 

3. Close relationships (middle adulthood)

3.4 Intergenerationl relationships

 

  • gradual shift with time of each generation’s position 
  • increasing similarity with one’s parents (active genotype-environment correlation) [cf. Chap. 2]
  • generation-specific perceptions of sources of conflicts

 

3. Close relationships (middle adulthood)

3.4 Intergenerationl relationships  
  • gender differences

 

gender differences:

  • most close relation between mothers and daughters
  • wife’s kin (Verwandtschaft) more involved than husband’s kin
  • maternal grandparents and aunts more often considered as loved relatives than from paternal side
  • special problems of sandwich-generation (having both children and parents)

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood)   1.1 Longevity (Langlebigkeit)
  • life expectancy
  • differences

 

  • • increased life expectancy (Lebenserwartung) [cf. Chap. 1]

country, ethnic, and gender differences:

  • at age 75, 61% are female; at age 85 and older, 70% are female
  • women have biologically more resistance to infections and degenerative diseases (possibly caused by their second X chromosome)

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood)   1.1 Longevity (Langlebigkeit)
  • centenarians (Hundertjährige)

 

  • in 1980, ca. 15,000 in U.S.; in 2000, 77,000; and in 2050, estimated 834,000
  • different factors responsible (genetic, nutrition [Ernährung], education, personality, lifestyle etc.)
  • significant proportion can be considered healthy

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.3 Biological theories of aging  
  • cellular - block theories (Hayflick)

 

maximum number of cell-division (Zellteilung) = 75-80 à life-span potential of 120-125 years
  •  biological clock mechanism: telomere reduction with each cell division

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.3 Biological theories of aging
  • free - radical theory

 

  • gradual increase in number of free radicals (freie Radikale) per cell
  • free radicals tend to damage DNA and other cell structures

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.3 Biological theories of aging
  • hormonal stress theory

 

  • lasting and elevated stress-hormone levels
  •  increased risk for cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, hypertension etc.

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.2 The aging brain
  • brain shrinkage

 

– 5-10% weight loss from 20 to 90 years – brain volume decreases (by 15%), esp. prefrontal cortex – dendrites, myelin, and neurons decrease

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.2 The aging brain
  • general

 

  • general slowing of brain functions
  • less lateralisation of brain functions (as compensation?)
neurogenesis?
  • only in hippocampus and olfactory bulb (Riechkolben)
  • only for weeks

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.4 Physical development appearence, movements

 

appearance: (Erscheinungsbild): more wrinkles (Falten) and age spots (Altersflecken)
  • slower movements

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.4 Physical development
  • vision.. decline in...

 

  • visual acuity (Sehschärfe)
  • color vision (Farbwahrnehmung)
  • depth perception (Tiefenwahrnehmung)
  • lightness adaptation (Helligkeitsadaptation)

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.4 Physical development
  • vision... diseases

 

  • cataracts (Katarakt, Linsentrübung, grauer Star)
  • glaucoma (Glaukom, grüner Star)
  • macular degeneration (AMD, altersbedingte Makula-Degeneration)

 

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood) 1.4 Physical development
  • hearing
  • smell and test

 

  • hearing: some loss between 65–74, more after 75 years 
  • smell and taste: some loss after 60 years

1. Longevity, biological aging, and physical development  (late adulthood)

  • Sexuality

 

  • continuing, but less frequent activity 
  • less frequent orgasms for men
  • 25% of 65-80 year-olds, and 50% of over-80-year-olds have erection problems

2. Health (late adulthood)

2.1 Health Problems 

  • Vaillant’s longitudinal studies (several samples from the 1910s to 1930s)

 

  • prediction of status with 75-80 years („happy-well“, „sad-sick“, or „dead“) from characteristics at 50 years of age
  • alcohol abuse and smoking best predictors for being dead with 75-80 years

 

2. Health (late adulthood)

2.1 Health Problems 

  • general

 

  • subjective health ratings surprisingly stable
  • main problems: arthritis, hypertension, diabetes
  • main causes of death: heart diseases, cancer, stroke (Schlaganfall)
  • further causes: chronic lung diseases, pneumonia (Lungenentzündung) and influenza (Grippe), diabetes
  osteoporosis = loss of bone tissue
  •  males : females = 1 : 4; almost 2/3 of women over 60