Hope I die before I get old: Mispredicting happiness across the lifespan.
The tendency to overestimate the influence of circumstances on well-being has been demonstrated for a range of life events, but the perceived impact of aging on well-being has been largely overlooked. People seem to dread growing old, despite evidence that well-being improves with age. We compared the self-reported happiness of younger adults (mean age = 31) and older adults (mean age = 68) with their estimates of happiness at different ages. Self-reports confirmed increasing happiness with age, yet both younger and older participants believed that happiness declines. Both groups estimated declining happiness for the average person, but only older adults estimated this decline for themselves.
Related Topics:
Well-Being and Happiness,
Affective Forecasting
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Hope I die before I get old: Mispredicting happiness across the lifespan. Ubel PA, Smith DM, Lacey HP. Journal of Happiness Studies. 7:167-182, 2005.
Peter Ubel, MD
Peter A. Ubel, MD, is Professor of Medicine and Professor of Psychology at the University of Michigan; a primary care physician at the Ann Arbor Veterans Affairs Medical Center; Associate Director of the Michigan Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program; and Director of the Center for...
Dylan Smith, PhD
Dylan Smith studied social psychology at Arizona State University, where his work focused on interpersonal and intergroup relations and evolutionary psychology. His current research seeks to translate theoretical and methodological advances in the behavioral sciences to the study of health-related...