Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL DEVELOPMENT
Volume 47, Issue 4, Pages 328-338Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/01650254231165837
Keywords
Adulthood; development; generativity; longitudinal; well-being
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Previous studies have found a link between higher generativity and better mental well-being, but the role of mental well-being in contributing to generativity has been neglected. This study examined the multidimensional structure and stability of mental well-being and its longitudinal associations with generativity. The findings showed stable associations between multidimensional, emotional, and psychological well-being and generativity. Social well-being at age 42 was found to predict generativity at age 50. In conclusion, multidimensional mental well-being remained stable from middle adulthood to the beginning of late adulthood, and it was linked to generativity at both the between- and within-person levels.
Previous studies have linked higher generativity with better mental well-being. However, most of these studies investigated the predictive role of generativity in well-being, while the converse relation, that is, how mental well-being contributes to generativity, has been ignored. This study first investigated the structure and stability of multidimensional mental well-being, that is, emotional (including happiness, life satisfaction, and positive and negative mood), psychological, and social well-being and the absence of depressive feelings, from age 42 to 61. Second, longitudinal associations between mental well-being and generativity were examined. The data (n = 301) utilized in this study were drawn from the Jyvaskyla Longitudinal Study of Personality and Social Development and were collected using self-report questionnaires and psychological interviews at the ages of 42, 50, and 61. Using structural equation modeling, the multidimensional structure of mental well-being showed partial strong factorial invariance and high stability from age 42 to 61. The associations between mental well-being (both the multidimensional factor and the single indicators) and generativity were tested using the random intercept cross-lagged panel model. Stable, trait-like associations were found between multidimensional, emotional, and psychological well-being and generativity. The longitudinal results showed that social well-being at age 42 predicted generativity at age 50. To conclude, multidimensional mental well-being seemed to remain stable from middle adulthood to the beginning of late adulthood. Furthermore, mental well-being and generativity may be linked at both the between- and within-person levels. In particular, social well-being appeared to be a resource through which individuals could increase their generativity.
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