Emotion adjustment skill seems to increase during adulthood. Elderly people have less negative emotions than young people. Elderly people report emotional stability and happiness over young people. Elderly people may be smarter than young people in dealing with differences between individuals. The elderly may pay more attention to goodwill and less attention to bad news. When older people experience negative emotions, they may recover faster than young people.
Therefore, at first glance, mature emotions "disappear", the ability to see the world through rosy glasses increases and there is a possibility of being intentional. Given these data, it is interesting to note that in some cases the mood of the elderly may be stronger than the mood of the young.
In fact, adverse events may be more difficult for the elderly than for young people. In researchers trying to create negative emotions among participants, the elderly may be more emotional than young people. This is especially true if the researcher uses negative stimuli associated with the elderly, for example stimulation of loss or corruption. My survey found that the response of the elderly to the movies has a greater negative impact than younger people.
A recent study by Streubel and Kunzmann (2011) showed that emotional arousal is a more attentive factor in aging studies. In other words, focusing on positive and negative emotions, and aging may be too limited; and you also need to pay attention to the intensity of emotions. In the case of strong emotions, elderly people may not be able to adjust feelings like young people. Indeed, with our data, we found that older people tend to respond more to negative emotions than younger people.
Emotions are complex with age. Elderly people are not just era of emotional health and tranquility. There is a strong emotion, responses to important life events will increase with age and will not decrease. Practitioners need more research to learn how elderly people can cause emotional events in their lives.
Gender regulates the way from male age to mental abuse. Young men report the most emotional abuse and decrease with age. Equivalent to older women - older women do not receive the most emotional abuse. Overall, emotional abuse is more common among young participants, which is consistent with previous findings and shows that young people are reporting the highest IPV rate I will. Young women have the highest isolation rate and the overall experience of women's physical damage is much higher than that of men. Indeed, the experience of women's loss of property increases with age.
Emotions are complex with age. Elderly people are not just era of emotional health and tranquility. There is a strong emotion, responses to important life events will increase with age and will not decrease. Practitioners need more research to learn how elderly people can cause emotional events in their lives.
A recent study by Streubel and Kunzmann (2011) showed that emotional arousal is a more attentive factor in aging studies. In other words, focusing on positive and negative emotions, and aging may be too limited; and you also need to pay attention to the intensity of emotions. In the case of strong emotions, elderly people may not be able to adjust feelings like young people. Indeed, with our data, we found that older people tend to respond more to negative emotions than younger people.
Happy or quiet seniors may be "happier" than people of other ages. According to previous studies, negative emotions decline with age, but positive emotions remain fairly stable throughout the middle years, with a slight decline in adulthood (Charles, Reynolds, & Gatz, 2001) . Depression is less common in the elderly, and the reported satisfaction of living tends to be fairly stable at various stages of life (Diener & Suh, 1998). Thus, the elderly may be better with emotional regulation, and with age, personality, previous happiness degree, satisfaction of life, access to resources, many other personal factors, but it is older We will decide the degree of the person. . "happiness"