Understanding Cohort Differences in Cross-generational, Self, and Peer Perceptions
- 1 March 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Gerontology
- Vol. 41 (2) , 234-240
- https://doi.org/10.1093/geronj/41.2.234
Abstract
Thirty adolescent, middle-aged, and elderly people participated in a study exploring (a) their self-, interand intra-cohort perceptions; (b) ascribed social distance; (c) knowledge of aging; and (d) the relationships among these phenomena. Data were gathered using a Social Distance Scale, Goals of Life Index, Facts on Aging Quiz, and Aging Semantic Differentials. In general, elderly adults were the most devalued and middle-aged adults the most favored cohort. Unfavorable attitudes toward elderly people were predicted more by age-related social distance and societally induced biases than differential investments in psychosocial life tasks. Appraising one's member cohort more favorably than those outside it was paralleled by a tendency to view the self more favorably than peers. The discrepancy between societal and older individuals' views of aging suggests that the social breakdown syndrome itself may be breaking down: Older adults are moving away from a characterization of themselves as ineffective and dependent. A similar view might be engendered in younger cohorts if social distance were reduced and more attention paid to assertions of elderly adults rather than to societally induced stereotypes.Keywords
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