Abstract
This study examined the role of values or guiding principles emerging from the life histories and reflections of 111 older adults as predictors of the experience of aging. Participants completed a detailed life history interview in which they described themselves on 10 major life dimensions. They also completed standardized questionnaires of well-being, personality traits, and intolerance of uncertainty. Participants expressed a mix of prosocial and self-interest values in their interviews. Multiple regression analyses indicated that social support and intolerance of uncertainty positively predicted the extent of values articulated in the interviews. Better quality of aging was predicted positively by extent of emergent values and greater well-being and negatively by age. The results indicate that an examination of values provides a unique contribution to the understanding of the experience of aging.
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Pushkar, D., Basevitz, P., Conway, M. et al. Emergent Values and the Experience of Aging. Journal of Adult Development 10, 249–259 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1026059511043
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1026059511043