TY - JOUR
T1 - Vital personality scores and healthy aging
T2 - Life-course associations and familial transmission
AU - Wertz, Jasmin
AU - Israel, Salomon
AU - Arseneault, Louise
AU - Belsky, Daniel W.
AU - Bourassa, Kyle J.
AU - Harrington, Hona Lee
AU - Houts, Renate
AU - Poulton, Richie
AU - Richmond-Rakerd, Leah S.
AU - Røysamb, Espen
AU - Moffitt, Terrie E.
AU - Caspi, Avshalom
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021
PY - 2021/9
Y1 - 2021/9
N2 - Objectives: Personality traits are linked with healthy aging, but it is not clear how these associations come to manifest across the life-course and across generations. To study this question, we tested a series of hypotheses about (a) personality-trait prediction of markers of healthy aging across the life-course, (b) developmental origins, stability and change of links between personality and healthy aging across time, and (c) intergenerational transmission of links between personality and healthy aging. For our analyses we used a measure that aggregates the contributions of Big 5 personality traits to healthy aging: a “vital personality” score. Methods: Data came from two population-based longitudinal cohort studies, one based in New Zealand and the other in the UK, comprising over 6000 study members across two generations, and spanning an age range from birth to late life. Results: Our analyses revealed three main findings: first, individuals with higher vital personality scores engaged in fewer health-risk behaviors, aged slower, and lived longer. Second, individuals’ vital personality scores were preceded by differences in early-life temperament and were relatively stable across adulthood, but also increased from young adulthood to midlife. Third, individuals with higher vital personality scores had children with similarly vital partners, promoted healthier behaviors in their children, and had children who grew up to have more vital personality scores themselves, for genetic and environmental reasons. Conclusion: Our study shows how the health benefits associated with personality accrue throughout the life-course and across generations.
AB - Objectives: Personality traits are linked with healthy aging, but it is not clear how these associations come to manifest across the life-course and across generations. To study this question, we tested a series of hypotheses about (a) personality-trait prediction of markers of healthy aging across the life-course, (b) developmental origins, stability and change of links between personality and healthy aging across time, and (c) intergenerational transmission of links between personality and healthy aging. For our analyses we used a measure that aggregates the contributions of Big 5 personality traits to healthy aging: a “vital personality” score. Methods: Data came from two population-based longitudinal cohort studies, one based in New Zealand and the other in the UK, comprising over 6000 study members across two generations, and spanning an age range from birth to late life. Results: Our analyses revealed three main findings: first, individuals with higher vital personality scores engaged in fewer health-risk behaviors, aged slower, and lived longer. Second, individuals’ vital personality scores were preceded by differences in early-life temperament and were relatively stable across adulthood, but also increased from young adulthood to midlife. Third, individuals with higher vital personality scores had children with similarly vital partners, promoted healthier behaviors in their children, and had children who grew up to have more vital personality scores themselves, for genetic and environmental reasons. Conclusion: Our study shows how the health benefits associated with personality accrue throughout the life-course and across generations.
KW - Big 5
KW - Health
KW - Life-course
KW - Mortality
KW - Personality
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85113389461&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114283
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114283
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
C2 - 34450386
AN - SCOPUS:85113389461
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 285
JO - Social Science and Medicine
JF - Social Science and Medicine
M1 - 114283
ER -