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Older
Adults control emotions better than young
Adults
Newswise — With age comes the ability to better regulate
emotions in order to not disrupt performance
on a memory-intensive task, according to a
study published in the March issue of the
journal Psychology and Aging.
The research study found that regulating emotions – such as
reducing negative emotions or inhibiting
unwanted thoughts – is a resource-demanding
process that disrupts the ability of young
adults to simultaneously or subsequently
perform tasks.
“This study is among the first to demonstrate that the
costs of emotion regulation vary across age
groups,” said Fredda Blanchard-Fields, chair
of Georgia Tech’s School of Psychology and
the study’s lead author.
The study – which included 72 young adults who were 20 to
30 years old and 72 adults who were 60 to 75
years old – was funded by the National
Institutes of Health.
It was conducted by
Blanchard-Fields and Susanne Scheibe, a
former postdoctoral fellow at Georgia Tech
currently at Stanford University.
For the investigation, three-fourths of the participants
watched a two-minute Fear Factor television
clip depicting a woman eating something
revolting in order to win money.
The video
was intended to induce a feeling of disgust
in the participants.
The remaining
participants comprising the control group
watched a two-minute clip of two men talking
about a woman’s dress and subsequently
sharing a beer in silence that was not
intended to induce emotions.
After watching one of the videos, each participant played a
computer memory game.
For the task, a number
– between zero and nine – appeared on a
computer screen and each participant had to
determine whether that number matched the
number that appeared on the screen two
numbers earlier.
Twenty-two trials were
presented before the task concluded and a
combined performance score was computed.
“To compare the effect that a person’s emotion regulation
strategies had on his or her performance at
the working memory task, the participants
who watched the disgust-inducing film were
divided into three groups and given
different emotion-regulatory instructions,”
explained Blanchard-Fields.
One group was told to change their negative reaction to the
disgusting television clip into positive
feelings as quickly as possible and another
group was advised to maintain the intensity
of their negative reaction to the video and
to not change their feelings in any way.
A
third group received no instructions. The
control group that watched the neutral video
of the men drinking beer also received no
instructions.
The volunteers then completed
two additional memory games.
The study showed that all of the participants performed
better at the working memory task after
watching the clip than before, likely due to
the learning process.
However, after being
told to turn their disgust into positive
feelings, the young adults performed
significantly worse than the older adults in
the memory task.
Older adults who were given
the same instructions continued to improve
at the memory task.
“Negative emotions can be toxic and disrupt one’s balance
in life, so the ability of older adults to
regulate negative emotions serves to enhance
their quality of life,” noted
Blanchard-Fields.
“Older adults are so
efficient at dealing with their emotions
that it doesn’t cost them any decrease in
performance, which is a really positive
thing.”
The trial also showed that having feelings of disgust by
themselves did not have an effect on
performance, as the participants in the
control group and the no-instruction group
performed similarly in the computer tasks.
It also showed that maintaining feelings of
disgust that were already present did not
disrupt performance in the computer tasks in
either age group.
To ensure that feelings of disgust were induced by the film
clip, participants reported the extent to
which they felt each of eight emotions –
disgusted, sad, frustrated, distressed,
angry, happy, content and interested – at
the beginning of the study, after watching a
clip and after each computer task.
Watching
the Fear Factor video produced elevated
disgust ratings in all participants.
After watching the video clip and completing two computer
tasks, the group that was told to turn their
disgust into positive feelings and the
control group both felt the same level of
disgust as they did before watching the
video.
The no-instruction group returned to
their baseline level after three computer
tasks, and the group asked to maintain their
feelings of disgust still had significantly
elevated disgust ratings at the final
emotion assessment.
“This study tested participants’ abilities to perform a
computer memory task after watching a clip
that induced disgust, but additional
research should be conducted to determine
whether the present findings apply to all
types of cognitive tasks or to all types of
negative emotions,” explained
Blanchard-Fields.
For example, sadness is an
emotion that is highly relevant to old age
and therefore may be harder for older adults
to regulate than disgust.
Future studies should also be conducted to determine
exactly how older adults achieved the same
emotion-regulatory goal with less cognitive
effort.
“The amount of resources necessary for older adults to
maintain or regain emotional well-being,
while performing well at other tasks might
be less because they have a wealth of past
experience in regulating their emotions –
they’ve been doing it for a long time,” said
Blanchard-Fields.
“On the other hand,
younger adults don’t tend to regulate their
emotions, so it takes effort, which draws
away resources so that they don’t perform as
well on tasks.”
The project described was supported by Grant No.
R01AG015019 from the National Institute on
Aging (NIA). The content is solely the
responsibility of the authors and does not
necessarily represent the official views of
the NIA or the National Institutes of
Health.
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