Resilience at information processing level in older adults : maintained attention for happy faces when positive mood is low
- Author
- Ineke Demeyer (UGent) , Inke Urbain and Rudi De Raedt (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- Even though ageing is associated with declining cognitive capabilities, research has demonstrated an age-related improvement in affective well-being. This improvement can be related to increased resilience, developing as changes in emotion regulation at information-processing level. During negative mood, emotion regulation becomes a priority as demonstrated by an increased preference for positive over negative information in older adults. However, the effect of a positive mood on older adult's attentional preferences has not been established yet. To investigate this, 37 older adults were randomly assigned to a relaxation or a control condition (music). Mood state was assessed before and after the manipulation. Attentional bias was measured by an exogenous cueing task, in which the location of the target was correctly or incorrectly cued by happy, sad or neutral facial pictures. Both groups showed a decrease in negative mood (p < .001, 95% CI [2.73, 5.97], d = .82) without changes in positive mood. The relaxation group showed a significantly bigger increase in feeling relaxed (p = .017, eta(2)(p) = .15). No significant group differences were found for attentional bias. However, over the whole group, less positive mood after the manipulation was associated with more maintained attention for positive information (r = -.49, p < .01). These results indicate that older adults deploy emotion regulation strategies in attention during low positive mood. Flexible attentional processing of emotional information might serve as a resilience factor to maintain well-being during later stages of life.
- Keywords
- MINI-MENTAL-STATE, SOCIOEMOTIONAL SELECTIVITY, NEGATIVE INFORMATION, EMOTIONAL FACES, AGE, PREFERENCES, METAANALYSIS, VALIDATION, COGNITION, MEMORY, attentional bias, older adults, positive mood, relaxation, resilience
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8542050
- MLA
- Demeyer, Ineke, et al. “Resilience at Information Processing Level in Older Adults : Maintained Attention for Happy Faces When Positive Mood Is Low.” SPANISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, vol. 20, Cambridge Univ Press, 2017, doi:10.1017/sjp.2017.45.
- APA
- Demeyer, I., Urbain, I., & De Raedt, R. (2017). Resilience at information processing level in older adults : maintained attention for happy faces when positive mood is low. SPANISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 20. https://doi.org/10.1017/sjp.2017.45
- Chicago author-date
- Demeyer, Ineke, Inke Urbain, and Rudi De Raedt. 2017. “Resilience at Information Processing Level in Older Adults : Maintained Attention for Happy Faces When Positive Mood Is Low.” SPANISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY 20. https://doi.org/10.1017/sjp.2017.45.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Demeyer, Ineke, Inke Urbain, and Rudi De Raedt. 2017. “Resilience at Information Processing Level in Older Adults : Maintained Attention for Happy Faces When Positive Mood Is Low.” SPANISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY 20. doi:10.1017/sjp.2017.45.
- Vancouver
- 1.Demeyer I, Urbain I, De Raedt R. Resilience at information processing level in older adults : maintained attention for happy faces when positive mood is low. SPANISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY. 2017;20.
- IEEE
- [1]I. Demeyer, I. Urbain, and R. De Raedt, “Resilience at information processing level in older adults : maintained attention for happy faces when positive mood is low,” SPANISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, vol. 20, 2017.
@article{8542050,
abstract = {{Even though ageing is associated with declining cognitive capabilities, research has demonstrated an age-related improvement in affective well-being. This improvement can be related to increased resilience, developing as changes in emotion regulation at information-processing level. During negative mood, emotion regulation becomes a priority as demonstrated by an increased preference for positive over negative information in older adults. However, the effect of a positive mood on older adult's attentional preferences has not been established yet. To investigate this, 37 older adults were randomly assigned to a relaxation or a control condition (music). Mood state was assessed before and after the manipulation. Attentional bias was measured by an exogenous cueing task, in which the location of the target was correctly or incorrectly cued by happy, sad or neutral facial pictures. Both groups showed a decrease in negative mood (p < .001, 95% CI [2.73, 5.97], d = .82) without changes in positive mood. The relaxation group showed a significantly bigger increase in feeling relaxed (p = .017, eta(2)(p) = .15). No significant group differences were found for attentional bias. However, over the whole group, less positive mood after the manipulation was associated with more maintained attention for positive information (r = -.49, p < .01). These results indicate that older adults deploy emotion regulation strategies in attention during low positive mood. Flexible attentional processing of emotional information might serve as a resilience factor to maintain well-being during later stages of life.}},
articleno = {{e53}},
author = {{Demeyer, Ineke and Urbain, Inke and De Raedt, Rudi}},
issn = {{1138-7416}},
journal = {{SPANISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY}},
keywords = {{MINI-MENTAL-STATE,SOCIOEMOTIONAL SELECTIVITY,NEGATIVE INFORMATION,EMOTIONAL FACES,AGE,PREFERENCES,METAANALYSIS,VALIDATION,COGNITION,MEMORY,attentional bias,older adults,positive mood,relaxation,resilience}},
language = {{eng}},
pages = {{8}},
publisher = {{Cambridge Univ Press}},
title = {{Resilience at information processing level in older adults : maintained attention for happy faces when positive mood is low}},
url = {{http://doi.org/10.1017/sjp.2017.45}},
volume = {{20}},
year = {{2017}},
}
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