Self-esteem development from young adulthood to old age: A cohort-sequential longitudinal study
Options
BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
April 2010
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Trzesniewski, Kali H. | |
Robins, Richard W. |
Subject(s)
Series
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0022-3514
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
20307135
Description
The authors examined the development of self-esteem from young adulthood to old age. Data came from the Americans’ Changing Lives study, which includes 4 assessments across a 16-year period of a nationally representative sample of 3,617 individuals aged 25 years to 104 years. Latent growth curve analyses indicated that self-esteem follows a quadratic trajectory across the adult life span, increasing during young and middle adulthood, reaching a peak at about age 60 years, and then declining in old age. No cohort differences in the self-esteem trajectory were found. Women had lower self-esteem than did men in young adulthood, but their trajectories converged in old age. Whites and Blacks had similar trajectories in young and middle adulthood, but the self-esteem of Blacks declined more sharply in old age than did the self-esteem of Whites. More educated individuals had higher self-esteem than did less educated individuals, but their trajectories were similar. Moreover, the results suggested that changes in socioeconomic status and physical health account for the decline in self-esteem that occurs in old age.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Orth_et_al_2010_JPSP.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 697.7 KB | publisher | published | ||
Orth et al 2010 JPSP.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.06 MB | publisher | accepted |