Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
Control beliefs are bidirectionally related to physical and cognitive health, and control beliefs are associated with awareness of aging (subjective age and awareness of age-related change [AARC]), but it is unclear how these processes unfold within persons over time. We examine these relationships from both between- and within-person perspectives.
Methods: Older adults (n = 116) ranging in age from 60 to 90 (M = 64.71) completed a 9-day daily diary study online, resulting in 743 total days. Participants reported their sociodemographic characteristics on Day 1 and physical symptoms, memory failures, felt age, daily AARC gain and loss experiences, and control beliefs on Days 2–9.
Results
Within-person deviations from one’s typical awareness of aging (AARC losses, AARC gains, and subjective age) were associated with fluctuations in control beliefs. Multilevel mediation results showed that between-person AARC losses mediated the relationship between health (both physical symptoms and memory failures) and control beliefs, whereas both within- and between-person control beliefs mediated the relationship between physical health and AARC losses. Model fit comparisons showed that models with control beliefs mediating health and awareness of aging fit better than models with awareness of aging mediating health and control beliefs.
Discussion
Our findings suggest that within-person physical and cognitive health indicators were associated with awareness of aging indirectly through control beliefs. Although between-person differences in AARC losses may link health and control beliefs, our results suggest that a more consistent pattern involves control beliefs linking health and awareness of aging.
Funder
College of Humanities and Social Sciences
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology
Reference58 articles.
1. Personal control and aging: How beliefs and expectations matter.;Agrigoroaei,2010
2. Statistical power in two-level models: A tutorial based on Monte Carlo simulation;Arend;Psychological Methods,2019
3. Life-span developmental psychology: Introduction to research methods;Baltes,1977
4. Conceptualizing and testing random indirect effects and moderated mediation in multilevel models: New procedures and recommendations;Bauer;Psychological Methods,2006
5. The health belief model and personal health behavior;Becker;Health Education Monographs,1974
Cited by
19 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献