Developmental Perspectives on Transitions at Age 60: Individuals Navigating Across the Lifespan (TRAILS) – latest data collection in a longitudinal JYLS study
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34707Date
2024-01-24Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Kokko, Katja; Fadjukoff, Päivi; Reinilä, Emmi; Ahola, Johanna; Kinnunen, Marja-Liisa; Kroger, Jane; Laakkonen, Eija K.; Pitkänen, Tuuli; Pulkkinen, Lea; Staudinger, Ursula M.; Taipale, Sakari; Törmäkangas, Timo; Kekäläinen, Tiia; Saajanaho, Milla; Rantanen, TainaAbstract
At around age 60, people are approaching late adulthood and are typically going through or
anticipating life transitions such as grandparenthood, retirement, or changes in health and
functioning. The timing and perception of transitions are individual and based on current
circumstances and earlier life history and may link to well-being. The TRAILS (Developmental
Psychological Perspectives on Transitions at Age 60: Individuals Navigating Across the Lifespan)
study, which is presented in the current article, examines the diversity and underlying factors
of different transitions at around age 60 and how they associate with mental well-being. It also
investigates whether these transitions link to personality characteristics, contextual resources,
and/or societal challenges. The role of earlier life history in the studied associations requires
a prospective multiwave design where the same participants are followed over time. Only a
few longitudinal studies have examined the developmental pathways from childhood to the
beginning of late adulthood.
The TRAILS study continues the Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Personality and Social
Development (JYLS). The JYLS was initiated in 1968 and includes earlier data collected
from ages 8 to 50. At age 61, in 2020–21, 206 of the JYLS participants (of the initial 369
children) took part in TRAILS. The data collection included a Life Situation Questionnaire,
a psychological interview, self-report inventories, a health examination and physical activity
surveillance covering major areas of adult life. TRAILS extends the JYLS study to over 52
years of follow-up time and provides unique opportunities for studying individual development
throughout the lifespan.
Publisher
Bristol University PressCitation
Kokko, Fadjukoff, Reinilä, Ahola, Kinnunen, Kroger, Laakkonen, Pitkänen, Pulkkinen, Staudinger, Taipale, Törmäkangas, Kekäläinen, Saajanaho. Developmental Perspectives on Transitions at Age 60: Individuals Navigating Across the Lifespan (TRAILS) – latest data collection in a longitudinal JYLS study. Longitudinal and Life Course Studies. 2024;15(2):251-281Metadata
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