Understanding the role of conscientiousness in healthy aging: where does the brain come in?
- PMID: 24773108
- PMCID: PMC4149252
- DOI: 10.1037/a0036152
Understanding the role of conscientiousness in healthy aging: where does the brain come in?
Abstract
In reviewing this impressive series of articles, I was struck by 2 points in particular: (a) the fact that the empirically oriented articles focused on analyses of data from very large samples, with the articles by Friedman, Kern, Hampson, and Duckworth (2014) and Kern, Hampson, Goldbert, and Friedman (2014) highlighting an approach to merging existing data sets through use of "metric bridges" to address key questions not addressable through 1 data set alone, and (b) the fact that the articles as a whole included limited mention of neuroscientific (i.e., brain research) concepts, methods, and findings. One likely reason for the lack of reference to brain-oriented work is the persisting gap between smaller sample size lab-experimental and larger sample size multivariate-correlational approaches to psychological research. As a strategy for addressing this gap and bringing a distinct neuroscientific component to the National Institute on Aging's conscientiousness and health initiative, I suggest that the metric bridging approach highlighted by Friedman and colleagues could be used to connect existing large-scale data sets containing both neurophysiological variables and measures of individual difference constructs to other data sets containing richer arrays of nonphysiological variables-including data from longitudinal or twin studies focusing on personality and health-related outcomes (e.g., Terman Life Cycle study and Hawaii longitudinal studies, as described in the article by Kern et al., 2014).
(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).
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Comment on
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A new life-span approach to conscientiousness and health: combining the pieces of the causal puzzle.Dev Psychol. 2014 May;50(5):1377-89. doi: 10.1037/a0030373. Epub 2012 Oct 22. Dev Psychol. 2014. PMID: 23088747 Free PMC article.
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Integrating prospective longitudinal data: modeling personality and health in the Terman Life Cycle and Hawaii Longitudinal Studies.Dev Psychol. 2014 May;50(5):1390-406. doi: 10.1037/a0030874. Epub 2012 Dec 10. Dev Psychol. 2014. PMID: 23231689 Free PMC article.
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