Emotional Reactivity Across the Adult Life Span: The Cognitive Pragmatics Make a Difference
Psychology & Aging, Vol. 24, Issue 4, pg. 879-889, 2009.
by Ute Kunzmann and David Richter
Previously, we found that during films about age-typical losses, older
adults experienced greater sadness than young adults, whereas their
physiological responses were just as large. In the present study, our
goal was to replicate this finding and extend past work by examining
the role of cognitive functioning in age differences in emotional
reactivity. We measured the autonomic and subjective responses of 240
adults (age range = 20 to 70) while they viewed films about age-typical
losses from our previous work. Findings were fully supportive of our
past work: The magnitude of subjective reactions to our films increased
linearly over the adult years, whereas there were no age differences on
the level of physiological reactivity. We also found that the
subjective reactions of adults with high pragmatic intelligence were of
moderate size independent of their own age or the age relevance of the
emotion elicitor. In contrast, the subjective reactions of adults low
on pragmatic intelligence were more variable. Together, this evidence
suggests that research on age differences in emotional reactivity may
benefit from a perspective that considers individual difference
variables as well as contextual variations.
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