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Late adulthood Ch 17-19 Developmental Psychology Jen Wright the aging process what ages? • • • • • Physical appearance Sense organs Muscles, joints, bones Sexual reproductive system All internal systems – cardiovascular, respiratory, etc. • Immune system • Brain – Sleep • Attitudes • Positives – Less susceptibility to colds and allergies – Frequency of accidental deaths drops dramatically • Aging can be beautiful! • Negatives – Natural aging process • Increased disability • Increased vulnerability to major diseases • Decreased capacity to respond to life stressors – And, even in the absence of these things, death. • Why is death the inevitable outcome? how long is a normal life? – maximum life span • the oldest possible age that members of a species can live • under ideal circumstances for humans – approximately 122 years – average life expectancy • the number of years the average newborn in a particular population group is likely to live • what is the average life expectancy? different kinds of aging • Universal aging – Primary • Probabilistic aging – Secondary • Chronological aging • Biological aging • Social aging – Ageism • Population aging universal/biological aging • Senesence – The universal biological processes of a living organism approaching an advanced age. • Oganismal senescence • Increased disability • Increased vulnerability to major diseases • Decreased capacity to respond to life stressors – Increasing homeostatic instability • Cellular senescence • It was once believed that normal cells were in principle immortal – Environmental factors responsible for cell death • Now we know that most (but not all) cells die • Hayflick limit – Number of times a cell will divide before dying – 52 times in 20% oxygen (normal air) – 70 times in 3% oxygen (human internal conditions) what controls cell division? • Cells possess molecular clocks – Telomeres • Non-coding appendix on ends of DNA – Shortened by mitosis – At certain length, cell will no longer divide – Protective mechanism against chromosome destruction, mutation, and cancer • Other forms of programmed cell death – E.g. apoptosis – Triggered by mitochondria biological theories of aging • • • • • Aging clock theory Wear and tear theory Accumulated waste theory Error accumulation theory Evolutionary explanation – Late-acting deleterious mutations not selected against Earlyacting disease Passing on genes Middleacting disease Lateacting disease centenarians • People living to be 100+ years old – 55,000 in US in 2005 • 1 in 50 women, 1 in 200 men – 30,000 in Japan • Okinawans 5x more likely – 450,000 world-wide – Super-centenarians: 110+ years • Reviewing lives of different centenarians – Many differences in lifestyles • Yet, they were similar in four ways… • diet was moderate • work continued throughout life • family, friends, community ties were important • exercise and relaxation were part of daily routine • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nw2lafKIEio aging prevention • Artificial extension of telomeres – Trade-off between aging and cancer – Vitamin D naturally lengthens • Increased sirtuins – repairs damage to DNA • Organ/tissue repair and rejuvenation – Free-radical therapy – Stem cells • Organ/tissue replacement – Artificial and cloned organs/tissue • Caloric Restriction – 45-75% of required calories – Extension of life in all species tested • in some cases, almost doubled – Reduction in Type2 diabetes, cancer, etc. • Intermittent fasting Healthy lifestyle • Drinking! • In moderation, drinking can increase lifespan – reduction in coronary heart disease • alcohol increases high-density lipoprotein (HDL), the “good” cholesterol and reduces low-density lipoprotein (LDL), the “bad” cholesterol that causes clogged arteries and blood clots • Heavy drinking increases risk of death – – – – – 27,000 death from liver disease/year Increased risk from many other diseases Brain damage, decreases fertility, osteoperosis Associated with other bad habits: overeating, smoking Increased risk of other forms of death: suicide, homocide, accidental Healthy lifestyle • Relaxing! • Leisure time -- vacations – 12,338 men between 35 – 57 years • 21% less likely to die over 9 years • 32% less likely to die of coronary heart disease • Social involvement – Engagement – Activity – Continuity Erickson’s stages developmental stages • Adolescence: Identity achievement • Young Adulthood: Developed network of intimacy • Mid-life: Generativity vs. Stagnation – Creating/giving vs. “self-absorption” • Late-life: Integrity vs. Despair – Life-review generativity • Productivity and effectiveness – Creative life projects • Influence in community or area of interest – Feeling needed by people – Helping younger generation develop – Appreciation/awareness of older generation • Broader, more global perspective – Interest in things beyond family integrity • Life-review: was one’s life meaningful or wasted? • Wisdom – Acceptance of life circumstances – Finding meaning/purpose • Regrets involve four major themes: • • • • Mistakes and bad decisions Hard times Social relationships Missed educational opportunities • Reminiscence therapy: discussing past activities and experiences with another individual or group. bucket lists personality • Conscientiousness predicts lower mortality risk from childhood through late adulthood. • Low conscientiousness and high neuroticism predicts earlier death. • Older adults characterized by negative affect do not live as long as those characterized by more positive affect. volunteerism • Older adults benefit from altruism and engaging in volunteer activities. • Helping others may reduce stress hormones, which improves cardiovascular health and strengthens the immune system. • Volunteering is associated with a number of positive outcomes – More satisfaction with life – Less depression and anxiety – Better physical health social aging • Unlike gender/ethnicity – Doesn’t apply for entire life. – (potentially) applies to everyone. • Ageism – Negative stereotypes associated with age negatively influence performance, function, and well-being. • Stereotypes against older adults are often negative • Most frequent form is disrespect, followed by assumptions about ailments or frailty caused by age – Positive stereotypes associated with age positively influence performance, function, and well-being. • cognitive decline is rooted not in the older person’s body and brain but in the surrounding social context. – cultural attitudes can lead directly to age differences in cognition • does most harm when individuals internalize other people’s prejudices and react with helplessness. • if the elderly fear losing their minds because they have internalized the idea that old age always bring dementia, that fear may become a stereotype threat, undermining normal thinking. • Ageism among scientists – scientists measure age differences in memory in the same way they studied memory in general—in laboratories – these factors work against older adults, who tend to perform best in familiar settings population aging • Increased age of population • Two causal factors – Rising life expectancy – Declining fertility • Asia/Europe face severe population aging – Average age approaching 50 • Economic implications – – – – More savings/less spending Increased health care Less education Retirement/social security Population aging