Carstensen, Laura L.
Laura L. Carstensen American psychologist
Carstensen, Laura L., 1953-
VIAF ID: 51808145 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/51808145
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Carstensen ‡b Laura L.
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Carstensen, Laura L.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Carstensen, Laura L.
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Carstensen, Laura L.
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Carstensen, Laura L.
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Laura L. Carstensen ‡c American psychologist
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (12)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Age and emotional experience during mutual reminiscing. | |
Age and ethnicity differences in storytelling to young children: emotionality, relationality, and socialization | |
Age differences in coping: does less mean worse | |
Age Differences in Striatal Delay Sensitivity during Intertemporal Choice in Healthy Adults. | |
Age-related patterns in social networks among European Americans and African Americans: implications for socioemotional selectivity across the life span | |
Aging and attentional biases for emotional faces | |
Aging and emotional memory: the forgettable nature of negative images for older adults | |
Aging, emotion, and evolution: the bigger picture | |
Aging, emotion, and health-related decision strategies: motivational manipulations can reduce age differences | |
The aging mind : opportunities in cognitive research | |
Anticipation of monetary gain but not loss in healthy older adults | |
Applying science to human behavior | |
Autonomic, subjective, and expressive responses to emotional films in older and younger Chinese Americans and European Americans | |
Behavioral treatment of the geriatric alcohol abuser: a long term follow-up study | |
Choosing social partners: how old age and anticipated endings make people more selective | |
Close emotional relationships in late life: further support for proactive aging in the social domain. | |
Correction. "Affect dynamics, affective forecasting, and aging". | |
Decision strategies in health care choices for self and others: older but not younger adults make adjustments for the age of the decision target | |
The demonstration of a behavioral intervention for late life paranoia | |
Differences in life expectancy due to race and educational differences are widening, and many may not catch up. | |
Does positivity operate when the stakes are high? Health status and decision making among older adults | |
The Elusiveness of a Life-span Model of Emotion Regulation | |
Emotion and aging: Experience, expression, and control | |
Emotion, physiology, and expression in old age. | |
Emotional aging: recent findings and future trends. | |
Emotional arousal may increase susceptibility to fraud in older and younger adults. | |
Emotional behavior in long-term marriage | |
Emotional experience improves with age: evidence based on over 10 years of experience sampling. | |
Emotional experience in the mornings and the evenings: consideration of age differences in specific emotions by time of day. | |
Enhancing the social environments of elderly nursing home residents: are high rates of interaction enough? | |
Exercise holds immediate benefits for affect and cognition in younger and older adults | |
Following your heart or your head: focusing on emotions versus information differentially influences the decisions of younger and older adults. | |
Forewarning reduces fraud susceptibility in vulnerable consumers | |
Handbook of clinical gerontology | |
Handbook of the biology of aging | |
How Does Survey Context Impact Self-reported Fraud Victimization? | |
Individual differences in insular sensitivity during loss anticipation predict avoidance learning. | |
The influence of a sense of time on human development | |
The influence of age and gender on affect, physiology, and their interrelations: a study of long-term marriages | |
Influence of HIV status and age on cognitive representations of others | |
Inside the American couple : new thinking/new challenges | |
Integrating cognitive and emotion paradigms to address the paradox of aging | |
Knowing loved ones' end-of-life health care wishes: attachment security predicts caregivers' accuracy. | |
A long bright future : happiness, health, and financial security in an age of increased longevity | |
MAKE MY DAY: AGE DIFFERENCES IN CONSTRUCTING AN IDEAL “FREE DAY” | |
Mechanisms of psychological influence on physical health : with special attention to the elderly | |
Mental health needs of the chronically mentally ill elderly | |
The new age of much older age. | |
Older age may offset genetic influence on affect: The COMT polymorphism and affective well-being across the life span | |
Perspectives on socioemotional selectivity in late life: how personality and social context do (and do not) make a difference | |
Poignancy: mixed emotional experience in the face of meaningful endings | |
The positivity effect: a negativity bias in youth fades with age | |
Preparing for long life in the 21st century | |
Promoting safe and effective use of OTC medications: CHPA-GSA National Summit | |
Promoting walking in older adults: Perceived neighborhood walkability influences the effectiveness of motivational messages | |
Psychology : the study of human experience | |
Replicating the positivity effect in picture memory in Koreans: evidence for cross-cultural generalizability | |
Selective attention to emotion in the aging brain. | |
Selective Narrowing of Social Networks Across Adulthood is Associated With Improved Emotional Experience in Daily Life | |
Selectivity as an Emotion Regulation Strategy: Lessons from Older Adults | |
Sending memorable messages to the old: age differences in preferences and memory for advertisements | |
Social desirability and the measurement of psychological well-being in elderly persons | |
Social structures, aging, and self-regulation in the elderly | |
Striving to feel good: ideal affect, actual affect, and their correspondence across adulthood | |
Taking time seriously. A theory of socioemotional selectivity | |
The theory behind the age-related positivity effect | |
Time counts: future time perspective, goals, and social relationships | |
TIME MATTERS: THE ROLE OF AGE AND MOTIVATIONAL CHANGES IN DECISIONS ABOUT TIME USE | |
Twenty-four Hours of Sleep, Sedentary Behavior, and Physical Activity with Nine Wearable Devices | |
Unpleasant situations elicit different emotional responses in younger and older adults | |
When Feeling Bad Can Be Good: Mixed Emotions Benefit Physical Health Across Adulthood | |
When I am sixty-four | |
When I'm 64 | |
Will interventions targeting conscientiousness improve aging outcomes? | |
You never lose the ages you've been: affective perspective taking in older adults |