4.3 Article

Perceived Trajectories of Life Satisfaction Across Past, Present, and Future: Profiles and Correlates of Subjective Change in Young, Middle-Aged, and Older Adults

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 833-847

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0013680

Keywords

subjective well-being; life satisfaction; subjective change; person centered; successful development

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Despite longitudinal stability in subjective well-being across adulthood, many adults perceive self-related change. This study was aimed at identifying differential subjective change profiles in life satisfaction rated for the present. the past, and the future and to examine their associations with sociodemographic variables and changes in adaptive functioning. The authors addressed this ann using Midlife in the United States survey data from 2 measurement Occasions (N = 3,631 age at Time 1: 24-75). A cluster analysis was used to identify a continuous high subgroup and an incremental Subgroup at both occasions. A 3rd subgroup was labeled present low at Time I and decremental at Time 2. Although the average pattern across individual variables suggested stability, up to 60% of individuals fit profiles depicting perceived change. and sonic individuals changed Subgroup membership over time. After controlling for sociodemographic characteristics, subgroups differed in level and change in biopsychosocial measures Of adaptive functioning, with sense of control and social relationship quality showing stronger associations than personality and physical health. Results indicate that a person-centered approach to assessing life satisfaction provides a rich and dynamic picture of individual differences in subjective well-being across the adult life span.

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