Department of Psychology, University of Utah, 390 South 1530 East BEH-S 502, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2010 Mar;46(2):479-90. doi: 10.1037/a0018098.
A broad array of research findings suggest that older adults, as compared with younger adults, have a more positive sense of self and possibly a clearer and more consistent sense of self. Further, older adults report lower motivation to construct or maintain a sense of self. In the present study, we examined whether such differences in self-views were reflected in features of older and younger adults' narratives and narrating practices around recent, self-relevant events. Narratives about self-discrepant and self-confirming events were elicited from a sample of younger (18-37 years of age; n = 115) and older (58-90 years of age; n = 62) adults and were compared for indicators of engagement in self-construction, meanings, and emotionality. Older adults' narratives contained significantly fewer self-focused pronouns, less present tense, and less emotional language, and they were significantly less likely to articulate and resolve challenges to their self-concepts. These findings, as well as others, are consistent with the idea that older adults are less engaged in self-construction in narrating everyday events, perhaps especially for self-discrepant events.
大量研究结果表明,与年轻人相比,老年人对自我有更积极的感觉,可能对自我有更清晰、更一致的感觉。此外,老年人报告说,构建或维持自我意识的动机较低。在本研究中,我们研究了自我观点的这种差异是否反映在老年人和年轻人围绕最近的自我相关事件的叙述和叙述实践中。从年轻人(18-37 岁;n=115)和老年人(58-90 岁;n=62)的样本中引出了关于自我不一致和自我确认事件的叙述,并比较了参与自我构建、意义和情感的指标。老年人的叙述中自我为中心的代词明显较少,现在时态较少,情绪化语言较少,他们不太可能表达和解决对自我概念的挑战。这些发现以及其他发现都与老年人在叙述日常事件时较少参与自我构建的观点一致,尤其是对于自我不一致的事件。