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Nemeroff, Robin; Midlarsky, Elizabeth; Meyer, Joseph F. – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2010
Social support has been shown to buffer the relationship between life stress and psychological distress in late life. However, little attention has been paid to personality variables that are associated with the capacity to effectively utilize social support. Although the buffering effects of social support were replicated in our sample of 134…
Descriptors: Social Support Groups, Personality, Psychological Patterns, Mental Health
Besen, Elyssa; Matz-Costa, Christina; Brown, Melissa; Smyer, Michael A.; Pitt-Catsouphes, Martha – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2013
There is a well-established relationship between age and job satisfaction. To date, there is little research about how many well-known predictors of job satisfaction, specifically job characteristics and core self-evaluations, may vary with age. Using a multi-worksite sample of 1,873 employed adults aged 17 to 81, this study evaluated the extent…
Descriptors: Age, Job Satisfaction, Relationship, Predictor Variables
Chappell, Neena L.; Dujela, Carren – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2009
Within gerontological caregiving research, there is a major emphasis on stresses and burdens of this role. Yet there has been little attention directed toward the coping strategies that caregivers engage in to cope with this role and the factors that influence their adoption of different coping strategies. This article examines coping strategies…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Coping, Caregiver Role, Health
Why Do Older Men Report Low Stress Ratings? Findings from the Veterans Affairs Normative Aging Study
Boeninger, Daria K.; Shiraishi, Ray W.; Aldwin, Carolyn M.; Spiro, Avron, III – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2009
We examined the interplay between three explanatory hypotheses for why older adults appear to rate their problems as less stressful than do younger adults: age-related differences in personality, in types of problems, and in the appraisal process--specifically, the number of primary stress appraisals. A sample of 1,054 men from the Normative Aging…
Descriptors: Personality, Age Differences, Veterans, Males
Pushkar, Dolores; Reis, Myrna; Morros, Melinda – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2002
This study examined the effects of personality traits and motivation to volunteer on well-being as 107 older participants went through an intervention to increase volunteering. Three groups of volunteers, current, new, and former volunteers, participated. Participants were assessed four times on standardized measures of personality, health,…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Personality, Motivation, Intervention
Cappeliez, Philippe; O'Rourke, Norm – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2002
The goal of the present study was to identify subgroups of older participants on the basis of unique configurations of variables among functions of reminiscence, personality traits, life attitudes, and perceived stress by means of cluster analysis. Ninety-three older adults (M = 66.7 years of age) completed the NEO-Five Factor Inventory, the Life…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Personality, Multivariate Analysis, Personality Traits
Life Satisfaction among the Very Old: A Survey on a Cognitively Intact Sample Aged 90 Year or Above.

Hilleras, Pernilla K.; Jorm, Anthony F.; Herlitz, Agneta; Winblad, Bengt – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2001
Explores life satisfaction and the factors that influence it with very old people (N=105). Specifically, information about life events, personality, and social contact were examined. Results show that health and an emotionally stable personality were, independently of other factors, the most important factors for life satisfaction among the very…
Descriptors: Activities, Foreign Countries, Health, Life Satisfaction