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Could an Aging Brain Contribute to Subjective Well-Being?
Book chapter

Could an Aging Brain Contribute to Subjective Well-Being?

Louise C Hawkley, Gary G Berntson, Daniel Tranel, Antoine Bechara and John T Cacioppo
Social Neuroscience
Oxford University Press
01/14/2011
DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195316872.003.0017

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Abstract

Carstensen and colleagues reported that at least until very late in life, healthy older adults reported lower levels of depressive symptomatology and higher levels of subjective well-being. These findings were surprising not only because they went against social stereotypes of the misery of old age, but because cognitive declines were also evident in older adults. Carstensen et al.'s important work has led to efforts to determine the underlying cause of the age-related decline in depressive feelings in the hopes of improving treatments for depressive symptomatology across the age range. Early work focused on the temporal perspective and self-regulatory strategies that characterize healthy older adults, but attention to age-related changes in brain function provide an alternative explanation for these findings. This chapter contrasts these two perspectives to examine how a neuroscientific approach to a social problem can produce insights that would not be discernible from a social or behavioral perspective alone. It also illustrates the complementary nature of research using fMRI and lesion patients.
well-being old age aging depression age-related decline social stereotypes

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