Developmental Regulation in Adulthood: Age-Normative and Sociostructural Constraints as Adaptive Challenges

by
Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2006-06-22
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
List Price: $51.45

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Summary

Human behavior is very flexible and ontogenetic potential adds to the scope of variability of developmental paths. Therefore, development in the life course needs to be regulated. Developmental regulation by the individual is scaffolded by external constraints. External constraints to development based on biological aging, institutional age-grading, and internalized age norms provide an age-graded agenda for striving for developmental growth and avoiding developmental decline. The life-span theory of control proposes that control of one's environment is the key to adaptive functioning throughout the life span. The theory identifies the evolutionary roots and the life-span developmental course of man striving to control the environment (primary control) and the self (secondary control). Primary control is directed at producing effects in the external world, while secondary control influences the internal world so as to optimize the motivational resources for primary control. A series of studies illustrate the rich repertoire of the human control system to master developmental challenges in various age periods and developmental ecologies.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii
List of Tables and Figures
ix
Introduction 1(6)
Selectivity and Failure Compensation as Fundamental Requirements of Human Behavior and Development
7(12)
Selectivity
9(6)
Failure Compensation
15(3)
Summary
18(1)
The Life Course as a Context of Action
19(43)
The Conceptual Framework of Life-Span Developmental Psychology
20(5)
Biological Constraints
25(4)
Sociostructural Constraints
29(4)
Constraints Based on Age-Normative Conceptions
33(27)
Summary
60(2)
Primary and Secondary Control across the Life Span
62(23)
The Primacy of Primary Control
64(4)
Secondary Control Facilitates Primary Control
68(1)
A Taxonomy of Control Strategies
68(3)
Life-Span Developmental Changes in Primary and Secondary Control
71(12)
Summary
83(2)
A Model of Developmental Regulation across the Life Span
85(17)
Selection, Compensation, and Optimization
85(1)
The Model of Optimization in Primary and Secondary Control (OPS Model)
86(7)
Criteria of Adaptiveness
93(3)
Positive and Negative Trade-offs
96(4)
Summary
100(2)
Developmental Goals as Organizers of Developmental Regulation
102(20)
Developmental Goals and Related Concepts
102(7)
Action-Phase Model of Developmental Regulation around Developmental Goals
109(3)
Extension and Application of the Action-Phase Model to Developmental Regulation
112(8)
Summary
120(2)
Developmental Regulation in Different Life-Course Ecologies
122(35)
Two Prototypical Challenges to Developmental Regulation
122(4)
Developmental Regulation in Young, Middle-Aged, and Old East and West Berliners
126(15)
Developmental Regulation in Four East German Age/Birth Cohorts
141(14)
Summary
155(2)
Social Comparisons as Prototypical Strategies in Developmental Regulation
157(34)
Three Functions of Social Comparison
157(3)
Developmental Expectations for the Self and Most Other People
160(9)
Self and Other at Mid-Life: Self-Enhancement by Social Downgrading
169(9)
Everyday Use of Downward, Upward, and Lateral Social Comparisons
178(11)
Summary
189(2)
Conclusions and Prospects for Future Research
191(10)
References 201(32)
Name Index 233(6)
Subject Index 239

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