Springstein Tabea, Growney Claire M, Strube Michael J, English Tammy
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis.
Department of Psychology, Stanford University.
Emotion. 2025 Mar;25(2):457-472. doi: 10.1037/emo0001435. Epub 2024 Sep 30.
One way older adults may be able to maintain emotional well-being despite declining in cognitive ability is through leveraging social resources for intrinsic interpersonal emotion regulation. Additionally, given their increased life experience, older adults might also be particularly well-suited to regulate the emotions of others. To examine age difference in use and effectiveness of intrinsic interpersonal emotion regulation, community adults ( = 290, aged 25-85 years) were prompted 6×/day for 10 days to report their emotional experience, use of intrinsic emotion regulation strategies (including capitalization, social sharing, co-reappraisal, and reminiscing), and interaction partner age. Older age was associated with being less likely to engage in social sharing of negative emotions, and this effect was stable when controlling for negative emotion experience. Otherwise, there were no age differences in how often or how effectively people use intrinsic interpersonal emotion regulation. In terms of interaction partner age, older partner age was only associated with greater likelihood of using co-reappraisal and higher reports of negative emotion after social sharing. In summary, there was no strong evidence for the idea that interpersonal emotion regulation becomes more (or less) common or effective with age. However, though people may be less likely to share negative emotions and be seen as less effective partners for sharing these emotions later in life, older adults are preferable social partners for co-reappraisal potentially due to their life experience. Future work should explore motivational (i.e., attitudes toward negative emotions) and cultural (i.e., perceptions of roles and emotional abilities) mechanisms. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
老年人尽管认知能力下降,但仍能维持情绪健康的一种方式是利用社会资源进行内在的人际情绪调节。此外,鉴于老年人生活经验的增加,他们可能也特别适合调节他人的情绪。为了研究内在人际情绪调节在使用和效果上的年龄差异,研究人员让社区成年人(N = 290,年龄在25 - 85岁之间)在10天内每天被提醒6次,报告他们的情绪体验、内在情绪调节策略的使用情况(包括积极分享、社交分享、共同重新评价和回忆)以及互动伙伴的年龄。年龄较大与较少参与负面情绪的社交分享有关,在控制负面情绪体验后,这种效应是稳定的。否则,人们在使用内在人际情绪调节的频率或效果方面没有年龄差异。就互动伙伴的年龄而言,年龄较大的伙伴仅与更多使用共同重新评价以及社交分享后更高的负面情绪报告有关。总之,没有强有力的证据支持人际情绪调节会随着年龄增长变得更(或更不)普遍或有效的观点。然而,尽管人们可能不太可能分享负面情绪,并且在晚年被视为分享这些情绪的效果较差的伙伴,但由于生活经验,老年人可能是共同重新评价时更合适的社交伙伴。未来的研究应该探索动机(即对负面情绪的态度)和文化(即对角色和情绪能力的认知)机制。(《心理学文摘数据库记录》(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)