Better Research is Needed to Understand Why Elders are Happier
by Derek M. Isaacowitz, Association for Psychological Science
January 5, 2012
Older people tend to be
happier. But why? Some psychologists believe that cognitive processes
are responsible—in particular, focusing on and remembering positive
events and leaving behind negative ones; those processes, they think,
help older people regulate their emotions, letting them view life in a
sunnier light. “There is a lot of good theory about this age difference
in happiness,” says psychologist Derek M. Isaacowitz of Northeastern
University, “but much of the research does not provide direct evidence”
of the links between such phenomena and actual happiness. In a new
article in Perspectives on Psychological Science, a journal published
by the Association for Psychological Science, Isaacowitz and the late
Fredda Blanchard-Fields of Georgia Institute of Technology argue for
more rigorous research.
Researchers, including the authors, have found that older people shown
pictures of faces or situations tend to focus on and remember the
happier ones more and the negative ones less. Other studies have
discovered that as people age, they seek out situations that will lift
their moods—for instance, pruning social circles of friends or
acquaintances who might bring them down. Still other work finds that
older adults learn to let go of loss and disappointment over unachieved
goals, and hew their goals toward greater wellbeing.
What’s missing, say the authors, are consistently demonstrated direct
links between these strategies and phenomena and changes of mood for
the better. One reason, Isaacowitz suggests, is that lab tests yield
results that are not straightforward. “When we try to use those
cognitive processes to predict change of mood, they don’t always do
so,” he explains. “Sometimes looking at positive pictures doesn’t make
people feel better.” A closer review of the literature also reveals
contradictions. Some people—younger ones, for instance—may make
themselves feel better by accentuating the negative in others’
situations or characteristics. And whereas some psychologists find that
high scores on certain cognitive tests correlate in older people with
the ability to keep their spirits up, other researchers hypothesize
that happiness in later life is an effect of cognitive losses—which
force older people to concentrate on simpler, happier thoughts.
More rigorous methods probably won’t overthrow the current theories,
says Isaacowitz, but they will complicate the picture. “It won’t be as
easy to say old people are happier. But even if they are happier on
average, we still want to know in what situations does this particular
strategy make this particular person with these particular qualities or
strengths feel good.”
|