Implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults

Two studies were conducted to investigate how normative conceptions of aging compare with adult children's expectations of change for their parents. In Study 1, the Implicit Theories of Aging Questionnaire (ITAQ) was developed to assess implicit theories of aging as pertaining to either one&...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vernon, Anne Elizabeth
Other Authors: Hultsch, David F.
Language:English
en
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/8224
id ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-8224
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-82242017-06-04T17:26:17Z Implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults Vernon, Anne Elizabeth Hultsch, David F. Adulthood Aging Two studies were conducted to investigate how normative conceptions of aging compare with adult children's expectations of change for their parents. In Study 1, the Implicit Theories of Aging Questionnaire (ITAQ) was developed to assess implicit theories of aging as pertaining to either one's mother, one's father, the average woman, or the average man. Respondents rated various aspects of everyday functioning as to (a) the direction and degree of expected change versus stability across the latter portion of the adult life course, (b) the estimated age of change onset, and (c) the target's ability to influence change. The second study replicated findings of the first, and extended it by exploring the relationship between implicit theories of aging and factual knowledge about the elderly as measured by Palmore's Facts on Aging Quiz. Results of the two studies indicated that people share highly similar beliefs about the direction, timing, and modifiability of aging-related change. For all four targets, respondents predicted more developmental change than stability and more losses than gains, but there was a strong optimistic bias in developmental predictions for parents. As compared to normative conceptions, parents were expected to undergo significantly fewer and significantly less severe declines in functioning. This optimistic bias did not appear to generalize to other belief components. Both parents and generalized adults were expected to undergo most functional loss during their mid-60s, and were thought to have some ability to influence loss. Judgments of modifiability seemed based in part on the perceived severity and timing of decline. Findings suggested that individuals may distinguish between aging-related loss that occurs through the intensification versus waning of existing attributes and abilities. It was hypothesized that increasing proportions of falsely held beliefs about old age would be correlated with predictions of greater aging-related decline. However, there was no association between misconceptions of aging and developmental beliefs, suggesting a possible distinction between implicit notions of the aging process and group-level generalizations about old age. These results, their generalizability, directions for future research, and practical implications were discussed. Graduate 2017-06-02T20:42:35Z 2017-06-02T20:42:35Z 1996 2017-06-02 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/8224 English en Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic Adulthood
Aging
spellingShingle Adulthood
Aging
Vernon, Anne Elizabeth
Implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults
description Two studies were conducted to investigate how normative conceptions of aging compare with adult children's expectations of change for their parents. In Study 1, the Implicit Theories of Aging Questionnaire (ITAQ) was developed to assess implicit theories of aging as pertaining to either one's mother, one's father, the average woman, or the average man. Respondents rated various aspects of everyday functioning as to (a) the direction and degree of expected change versus stability across the latter portion of the adult life course, (b) the estimated age of change onset, and (c) the target's ability to influence change. The second study replicated findings of the first, and extended it by exploring the relationship between implicit theories of aging and factual knowledge about the elderly as measured by Palmore's Facts on Aging Quiz. Results of the two studies indicated that people share highly similar beliefs about the direction, timing, and modifiability of aging-related change. For all four targets, respondents predicted more developmental change than stability and more losses than gains, but there was a strong optimistic bias in developmental predictions for parents. As compared to normative conceptions, parents were expected to undergo significantly fewer and significantly less severe declines in functioning. This optimistic bias did not appear to generalize to other belief components. Both parents and generalized adults were expected to undergo most functional loss during their mid-60s, and were thought to have some ability to influence loss. Judgments of modifiability seemed based in part on the perceived severity and timing of decline. Findings suggested that individuals may distinguish between aging-related loss that occurs through the intensification versus waning of existing attributes and abilities. It was hypothesized that increasing proportions of falsely held beliefs about old age would be correlated with predictions of greater aging-related decline. However, there was no association between misconceptions of aging and developmental beliefs, suggesting a possible distinction between implicit notions of the aging process and group-level generalizations about old age. These results, their generalizability, directions for future research, and practical implications were discussed. === Graduate
author2 Hultsch, David F.
author_facet Hultsch, David F.
Vernon, Anne Elizabeth
author Vernon, Anne Elizabeth
author_sort Vernon, Anne Elizabeth
title Implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults
title_short Implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults
title_full Implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults
title_fullStr Implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults
title_full_unstemmed Implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults
title_sort implicit theories of aging : predictions of developmental change in parents versus generalized adults
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/8224
work_keys_str_mv AT vernonanneelizabeth implicittheoriesofagingpredictionsofdevelopmentalchangeinparentsversusgeneralizedadults
_version_ 1718455974523568128