de Paula Couto M Clara P, Weiss David, Casper Maxi, Rothermund Klaus
Department of Psychology, Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena.
Department of Psychology, Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg.
Psychol Aging. 2025 May 8. doi: 10.1037/pag0000902.
Views on aging (VoA) have consequences for development across the lifespan affecting the aging process of individuals in important ways. Previous research has shown that how individuals perceive their aging (i.e., personal VoA) predict how many years they live, with more positive self-views being associated with decreased risk of mortality. While views of older adults (i.e., generalized VoA), or age stereotypes, have been shown to predict worse physical, mental, and cognitive health, whether and how they are associated with mortality remains unclear. In this study, we thus aimed to use a multidimensional approach to examine the impact of both personal and generalized VoA on mortality risk. Data were drawn from the Ageing as Future longitudinal study and included participants who took part in the baseline assessment in 2009 ( = 768, 49.5% female, = 55.17, age range = 30-80 years). Information on mortality was obtained 15 years later, in 2024. Replicating and extending previous findings, a survival analysis indicated that individuals with future views of their own aging had a risk of mortality. However, when examining generalized VoA, a different pattern emerged. After accounting for the influence of internalization effects (captured by personal VoA), individuals with views of older adults in general were found to have a risk of mortality. Both effects remained significant even after controlling for participants' age, gender, household income, education, self-rated health, and life satisfaction. The findings suggest that both personal and generalized VoA influence how long individuals live, although in opposing directions. We discuss these findings in terms of internalization and dissociation of VoA. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
对衰老的看法(VoA)会对整个生命周期的发展产生影响,以重要方式影响个体的衰老过程。先前的研究表明,个体如何看待自己的衰老(即个人的VoA)能预测他们的寿命长短,更积极的自我看法与降低的死亡风险相关。虽然对老年人的看法(即普遍的VoA)或年龄刻板印象已被证明可预测更差的身体、心理和认知健康,但它们与死亡率是否相关以及如何相关仍不清楚。因此,在本研究中,我们旨在采用多维度方法来检验个人和普遍的VoA对死亡风险的影响。数据来自“未来老龄化”纵向研究,包括2009年参加基线评估的参与者(n = 768,49.5%为女性,M = 55.17,年龄范围 = 30 - 80岁)。15年后的2024年获得了死亡信息。重复并扩展先前的研究结果,一项生存分析表明,对自己衰老持有更积极未来看法的个体有更低的死亡风险。然而,在检验普遍的VoA时,出现了不同的模式。在考虑内化效应(由个人的VoA体现)的影响后,发现总体上对老年人持有更积极看法的个体有更高的死亡风险。即使在控制了参与者的年龄、性别、家庭收入、教育程度、自评健康和生活满意度后,这两种效应仍然显著。研究结果表明,个人和普遍的VoA都影响个体的寿命长短,尽管方向相反。我们从VoA的内化和解离角度讨论了这些发现。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)