Momentary Subjective Age Is Associated With Perceived and Physiological Stress in the Daily Lives of Old and Very Old Adults

Subjective age, that is the age people feel in relation to their chronological age, can vary on a day-to-day and even momentary basis. Previous long-term and daily-diary studies have shown that elevated stress covaries with older subjective age. However, it is an open question whether such links can...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Psychology and aging 2022-12, Vol.37 (8), p.863-875
Hauptverfasser: Kornadt, Anna E., Pauly, Theresa, Schilling, Oliver K., Kunzmann, Ute, Katzorreck, Martin, Lücke, Anna J., Hoppmann, Christiane A., Gerstorf, Denis, Wahl, Hans-Werner
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Subjective age, that is the age people feel in relation to their chronological age, can vary on a day-to-day and even momentary basis. Previous long-term and daily-diary studies have shown that elevated stress covaries with older subjective age. However, it is an open question whether such links can also be observed at the momentary level within a given day and go beyond self-reports of stress. Moving ahead, we investigated how two indicators of stress (self-reported: perceived stress; physiological: salivary cortisol) are associated with the age people feel on a momentary basis. We examined data from 118 older (Mage = 66.67 years) and 36 very old adults (Mage = 85.92 years) who reported their momentary subjective age and perceived stress and also provided saliva samples up to seven times a day over seven consecutive days. Dynamic structural equation models showed that both higher momentary perceived stress and higher cortisol levels preceding the measurement predicted an older momentary subjective age. In contrast, subjective age at the previous measurement did not predict subsequent stress. These effects were moderated by participant age group and grip strength, albeit not consistently. Our results corroborate and extend earlier findings that both self-reported and physiological stress are important explanatory variables for people's subjective age variation even on relatively short time scales and shed light on differential time-ordered dynamics between stress and subjective age in daily life. Findings also inform theoretical models of subjective age that highlight the importance of contextual, momentary influences on how old people feel and help better understand how biological and psychological processes are intertwined in later life. Public Significance Statement This study finds that higher perceived and biological stress affect how older adults feel (i.e., their subjective age) in a given moment: When people are stressed, they feel older. Subjective age is an important predictor of health and well-being in later life. Thus, this study increases our understanding about the factors that might influence how older adults feel and how it translates to outcomes in older adults' daily lives.
ISSN:0882-7974
1939-1498
DOI:10.1037/pag0000711