Evaluation of age-related labels by senior citizens
✍ Scribed by Bert Weijters; Maggie Geuens
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 167 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0742-6046
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The age‐related labels third age, elderly, 50+, senior, and retired were evaluated by a 40+ sample. Results of a qualitative and quantitative study showed that the labels third age and elderly evoked predominantly negative associations, and the evaluations of the latter three age‐related labels were generally positive. Cognitive age did not appear to add explanatory power, but group membership did (being retired or not, perceiving oneself as a senior or not). Moreover, a significant interaction effect between group membership and age emerged. When people did not belong or did not perceive themselves to belong to a given age group, the evaluation of the related label became more negative when the respondents approached the age to be eligible for group membership. After becoming or accepting to become part of the group, evaluations of the label increased again. On the basis of these results, an alternative‐stage model is proposed: status irrelevance, status rejection, status acceptance, and status championship. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract ## Purpose: To investigate age‐related regional perfusion changes focused on the medial temporal lobes and related parietal areas using a pulsed arterial spin labeling technique. ## Materials and Methods: Resting cerebral blood flow (CBF) maps were obtained from 44 healthy volunteers
The shortcomings of current methods of basophil enumeration detract from the clinical value of the basophil count. Moreover, sophisticated and costly techniques of automated basophil counting hardly can be validated for lackof a suitable reference method. We investigated whether a flow cytometric te
## Abstract Acid‐soluble collagens isolated from young and old rat tail tendon were fluorescent‐labeled with dansyl hydrazine, which is capable of reacting with aldehyde groups in collagen. The dansyl fluorescence of aged collagen exhibited a weak peak at 525 nm, whereas that of young collagen had
## Abstract We examined age‐related changes in the turnover rates of synaptic membrane components that might underlie the decrease in synaptic functions in senescence. Synaptic membrane constituents were labeled in vivo with deuterium and the disappearance of the deuterated molecules from synaptic