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Resources and life-management strategies as determinants of successful aging: on the protective effect of selection, optimization, and compensation
Authors:Jopp Daniela  Smith Jacqui
Institution:Research Group on Psychological Gerontology, Free University of Berlin, and Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany. daniela.jopp@psych.gatech.edu
Abstract:In this research, the authors investigated the specific and shared impact of personal resources and selection, optimization, and compensation (SOC) life-management strategies (A. M. Freund & P. B. Baltes, 2002) on subjective well-being. Life-management strategies were expected to be most relevant when resources were constrained, particularly in very old age. In Study 1 (N=156, 71-91 years), age-differential predictive patterns supported this assumption: Young-old individuals' well-being was predicted independently by resources and SOC, whereas SOC buffered the effect of restricted resources in old-old individuals. Study 2 replicated the findings longitudinally with resource-poor and resource-rich older individuals (N=42). In both studies, specific SOC strategies were differentially adaptive. Results confirm that resources are important determinants of well-being but that life-management strategies have a considerable protective effect with limited resources.
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