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People over forty feel 20% younger than their age: subjective age across the lifespan.
Abstract
Subjective age--the age people think of themselves asbeing--is measured in a representative
Danish sample of 1,470 adults between 20 and 97 years of age through personal, in-home
interviews. On the average, adults younger than 25 have older subjective ages, and
those older than 25 have younger subjective ages, favoring a lifespan-developmental
view over an age-denial view of subjective age. When the discrepancy between subjective
and chronological age is calculated as a proportion of chronological age, no increase
is seen after age 40; older respondents feel 20% younger than their actual age. Demographic
variables (gender, income, and education) account for very little variance in subjective
age.
Type
Journal articleSubject
AdultAged
Aged, 80 and over
Aging
Denial (Psychology)
Female
Humans
Individuality
Interview, Psychological
Judgment
Male
Middle Aged
Reality Testing
Self Concept
Set (Psychology)
Sweden
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
David C. Rubin
Juanita M. Kreps Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience
For .pdfs of all publications click here My main research interest has been in long-term
memory, especially for complex (or "real-world") stimuli. This work includes the study
of autobiographical memory and oral traditions, as w

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