Authors
Robert S Stawski, Stacey B Scott, Matthew J Zawadzki, Martin J Sliwinski, David Marcusson-Clavertz, Jinhyuk Kim, Stephanie T Lanza, Paige A Green, David M Almeida, Joshua M Smyth
Publication date
2019/2
Journal
Psychology and Aging
Volume
34
Issue
1
Pages
91
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Advancing age is often characterized by preserved or even enhanced emotion regulation, which is thought to manifest in terms of age-related reductions in the within-person association between stressors and negative affect. Existing research from ecological momentary assessment and end-of-day daily diary studies examining such age-related benefits have yielded mixed results, potentially due to differences in samples, design, and measurement of everyday stressors and negative affect. We conducted a coordinated analysis of 5 ecological momentary assessments and 2 end-of-day daily diary studies to examine adult age differences in the within-person association between everyday stressors and negative affect. Reported stressor occurrences are robustly associated with higher negative affect, regardless of study design and sample characteristics. Across studies, interactions between age and everyday …
Total citations
201920202021202220232024491521123
Scholar articles