How could lay perspectives on successful aging complement scientific theory? Findings from a u.s. And a German life-span sample

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How could lay perspectives on successful aging complement scientific theory? Findings from a u.s. And a German life-span sample is …
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scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1093/GERONT/GNU059
P932PMC publication ID5994883
P698PubMed publication ID24958719

P2093author name stringDaniela S Jopp
Amanda K Damarin
Dagmara Wozniak
Melissa De Feo
Seojung Jung
Sheena Jeswani
P2860cites workSuccessful Aging: Perceptions of Adults Aged between 70 and 101 YearsQ58640750
Age identification: a comparison between Finnish and North-American culturesQ74509915
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Adaptation in very old age: exploring the role of resources, beliefs, and attitudes for centenarians' happinessQ33246504
Successful aging and well-being: self-rated compared with Rowe and KahnQ34160861
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Definitions and predictors of successful aging: a comprehensive review of larger quantitative studiesQ36366191
A review of successful aging models: proposing proactive coping as an important additional strategyQ36747578
Successful aging through the eyes of Alaska Native elders. What it means to be an elder in Bristol Bay, AK.Q37622958
Older adults' views of "successful aging"--how do they compare with researchers' definitions?Q40537395
A preliminary empirical test of a culturally-relevant theoretical framework for the study of successful agingQ40549648
Lay perceptions of successful ageing: findings from a national survey of middle aged and older adults in BritainQ41278340
Dealing with negative life events: differential effects of personal resources, coping strategies, and control beliefsQ41290140
Successful aging, life satisfaction, and generativity in later lifeQ42632397
The aging self in a cultural context: the relation of conceptions of aging to identity processes and self-esteem in the United States and the NetherlandsQ44662226
Perceptions of successful aging among older Latinos, in cross-cultural contextQ44977107
The personal experience of aging, individual resources, and subjective well-beingQ47573846
Attitudes about aging well among a diverse group of older Americans: implications for promoting cognitive healthQ47584370
Selection, optimization, and compensation as strategies of life management: correlations with subjective indicators of successful agingQ47607180
Lay concept of aging well: cross-cultural comparisonsQ47689920
Older men's lay definitions of successful aging over time: the Manitoba follow-up studyQ47999789
A new multidimensional model of successful aging: perceptions of Japanese American older adultsQ48660263
Robust aging among the young-old, old-old, and oldest-old.Q51125925
Definition of successful aging by elderly Canadian males: the Manitoba Follow-up Study.Q51946239
Psychological perspectives on successful aging: The model of selective optimization with compensationQ56531996
A Coefficient of Agreement for Nominal ScalesQ57167717
Population ageing and healthQ57763512
P433issue1
P921main subjectlifetimeQ22675021
P304page(s)91-106
P577publication date2014-06-23
P1433published inGerontologistQ15757423
P1476titleHow could lay perspectives on successful aging complement scientific theory? Findings from a u.s. And a German life-span sample
P478volume55