School of Aging Studies, University of South Florida, Tampa, USA.
Center for Healthy Minds, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2022 Apr 1;77(4):710-720. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbab144.
Studies demonstrate the association between diverse emotions and health. However, we know little about how these emotions are related to activities in daily life. This study examined whether the diversity of daily activities ("activity diversity") is associated with the diversity of both positive and negative daily emotions ("emodiversity") in adulthood. We also examined if these associations differed by age.
2 separate samples of participants from the Midlife in the United States Study II (M2: 2004-2009, n = 2,012, Mage = 56 years) and Refresher (MR: 2012-2016, n = 779, Mage = 47 years) provided activity and emotion data for 8 consecutive days. Using Shannon's entropy, we constructed activity diversity and emodiversity (positive, negative) scores. Analyses adjusted for sociodemographic and health characteristics, total activity time, mean positive/negative emotions, and number of days with positive/negative emotion data.
Greater activity diversity was associated with greater positive emodiversity and greater negative emodiversity in both samples. In the M2 sample, the association between activity diversity and positive emodiversity was stronger among relatively younger adults, such that the positive association among those aged 33-44 years was greater than that observed among those aged 68-84 years. Results held after adjusting for time spent in each of the activities or when using different emodiversity metrics (Gini or Simpson coefficients).
Broad and even participation of daily activities may provide more opportunities to experience rich and balanced emotions. Findings suggest that the association between activity diversity and emodiversity exists across adulthood, underscoring the value of including information about daily activities when examining emotional experiences across the life span.
研究表明,多种情绪与健康之间存在关联。然而,我们对于这些情绪如何与日常生活中的活动相关知之甚少。本研究探讨了成年期日常活动的多样性(“活动多样性”)是否与积极和消极日常情绪(“情绪多样性”)的多样性相关。我们还检验了这些关联是否因年龄而异。
来自美国中期生活研究 II(M2:2004-2009,n=2012,平均年龄=56 岁)和刷新研究(MR:2012-2016,n=779,平均年龄=47 岁)的 2 个独立样本参与者连续 8 天提供了活动和情绪数据。我们使用香农熵构建了活动多样性和情绪多样性(积极、消极)得分。分析调整了社会人口统计学和健康特征、总活动时间、平均积极/消极情绪以及有积极/消极情绪数据的天数。
在两个样本中,活动多样性与积极情绪多样性和消极情绪多样性均呈正相关。在 M2 样本中,活动多样性与积极情绪多样性之间的关联在相对较年轻的成年人中更强,例如,33-44 岁人群之间的正相关关系大于 68-84 岁人群。结果在调整每种活动的时间花费或使用不同的情绪多样性指标(基尼系数或辛普森系数)后仍然成立。
广泛而均衡地参与日常活动可能会提供更多体验丰富和平衡情绪的机会。研究结果表明,活动多样性和情绪多样性之间的关联存在于成年期,强调了在考察整个生命周期的情感体验时,包含日常活动信息的重要性。