Normal cognitive development into old age and competencies in everyday life.

Author(s):  
Manfred Diehl ◽  
Hans-Werner Wahl
Author(s):  
Libby Worth

Dance improvisation, as developed in the UK and the US in particular, has become associated with a number of tropes that apparently offer means of best practice. By attending to a few of these, I examine how they might offer insight into dance improvisation. This incorporates research into ways in which improvisation is a part of everyday life, as demonstrated most clearly in examples of infant movement and cognitive development. Taking Henry Montes and Marcus Coates’s dance film A Question of Movement as a case study example, I consider how their innovative way of dancing responses to life questions connects with the infant’s reliance on ‘thinking in movement’, a term offered by Maxine Sheets-Johnstone. Finally, I consider what dancers can learn from people living with chronic dementia-related diseases who forge ways to live in a perpetual present and, conversely, what insight dancers might offer through integration of dance improvisatory processes in caregiving.


2005 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 303-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Lövdén ◽  
Lars Bergman ◽  
Rolf Adolfsson ◽  
Ulman Lindenberger ◽  
Lars-Göran Nilsson

1993 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 135-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin S. Lindauer

The old-age style is well-known among art historians, but has rarely been recognized by psychologists despite its bearing on late-life creativity. Untrained subjects' ability to perceive an old-age style, and indirectly, the identification of its artists, were investigated in five separate studies. One hundred subjects judged twenty-four pairs of young-old art on five aspects of the old-age style. Fifteen pairs (63%) differed from one another across the tasks, and suggested that the following historical artists have an old-age style: Bellows, Cole, Eakins, Goya, Guardi, Innes, Kirchner, Klee, Mondrian, Monet, Picasso, Pissaro, Reynolds, Sargent, and Tobey. In contrast, young-old pairs by nine artists did not sufficiently differ, suggesting they did not have an old-age style: Copley, Corinth, Hoffman, Kline, Leger, Manet, Marin, Stuart, and Tiepolo. Several other measures on which young-old art were compared, except for canvas size, did not differentiate the pairs. The applicability of the old-age style to non-artists, whether creative or not, and to late-life cognitive development in general, were discussed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 265-267

Inas Kelly of Queens College, City University of New York reviews “The End Game: How Inequality Shapes Our Final Years,” by Corey M. Abramson. The Econlit abstract of this book begins: “Paperback edition of 2015 text illustrates how key mechanisms of social stratification structure everyday life in old age and how the unique practical and symbolic aspects of old age make it an important axis of American inequality.”


Author(s):  
Sally Chivers

This chapter examines The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel cinema franchise (UK, 2011 & 2015) in relation to the care home franchise it represents. The films characterize the British seniors’ choice to outsource their retirement to India as both economically sensible and personally extraordinary, while glossing over the everyday life of Jaipur residents. The films try to make exotic the everyday (white) life of old age, including a need for new collective living situations, offering a unique perspective on contemporary aging as embodied and highly material without diminishing the potential value of older adults. However, the exoticism relies on what should be an uncomfortable racism arising from making one person’s everyday into another person’s exotic, offering a canny perspective on the disturbing and under-analyzed racial politics of contemporary aging.


1973 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaber F. Gubrium
Keyword(s):  
Old Age ◽  

Fear is defined as a state of mind characterized by desperation and anxiousness stemming from personal incompetence in coping with events of everyday life. Expressions of fear in old age are described with data from a sample of 210 persons, aged 60 to 94, interviewed in Detroit. Self-defined sources of fear as well as active responses to it are discussed. Strategies for reducing fear in old age are suggested.


2001 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 392-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petra L. Klumb

The operation of self-efficacy beliefs was investigated in a group of 81 participants between 73 and 97 years of age with intensive time samples including activities carried out at the moment a signal was received, their subjective difficulty, and concurrent mood in everyday life. In a two-level approach, occasion-level and person-level effects could be modelled simultaneously. Within individuals, productive activities were perceived more difficult, on average, than nonproductive ones. Furthermore, perceived difficulty was lower the more positive concurrent mood was rated. Variance in these intra-individual slopes was partially explained by inter-individual differences in self-belief of efficacy regarding everyday activities.


2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (10) ◽  
pp. 2156-2175 ◽  
Author(s):  
ASTRID BERGLAND ◽  
ÅSHILD SLETTEBØ

ABSTRACTAs more people experience old age as a time of growth and productivity, more research is needed that explores how they master everyday life. This paper reports on a qualitative study that explored how ten older women age 90 years or more experience and cope with the challenges of everyday life with a salutogenic perspective. The findings suggest that health resources such as positive expectation, reflection and adaptation, function and active contribution, relations and home, contribute to the health capital of women. These health resources were of importance for the women's experience of comprehensibility, manageability and meaningfulness in daily life. Health capital is a meaningful concept for understanding coping in everyday life by older people.


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