Publication | Open Access
Identity Processing and Self-Consciousness in Middle and Later Adulthood
142
Citations
29
References
2003
Year
Transition To AdulthoodIdentity BalanceCognitive SciencePersonal IdentitySelf-awarenessIdentity ProcessingSelf-conceptSelf IdentityIdentity Process TheorySocial SciencesLater AdulthoodIdentity IssueSocial CognitionPsychologyIdentity AccommodationDevelopmental Psychology
Identity process theory proposes that adjustment to aging can be conceptualized as involving the three processes of identity assimilation (maintaining self-consistency), identity accommodation (making changes in the self), and identity balance (maintaining a sense of self but changing when necessary). Measures of the identity processes and self-consciousness were administered to a community sample of 173 adults (108 women and 65 men) ranging in age from 42 to 85 years (M = 60.80; SD = 12.58). Consistent with theory, identity assimilation was positively associated with age and negatively related to self-reflection. Identity accommodation was negatively related to age and internal state awareness and positively related to self-reflection and public self-consciousness. Identity balance alone was positively related to internal state awareness, indicating that the ability to incorporate age-related changes within identity but at the same time maintain a consistent and positive view of the self is most conducive to successful aging.
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