» Articles » PMID: 38656961

When I Am Sixty-four… Evaluating Language Markers of Well-being in Healthy Aging Narratives

Overview
Journal PLoS One
Date 2024 Apr 24
PMID 38656961
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Natural language use is a promising candidate for the development of innovative measures of well-being to complement self-report measures. The type of words individuals use can reveal important psychological processes that underlie well-being across the lifespan. In this preregistered, cross-sectional study, we propose a conceptual model of language markers of well-being and use written narratives about healthy aging (N = 701) and computerized text analysis (LIWC) to empirically validate the model. As hypothesized, we identified a model with three groups of language markers (reflecting affective, evaluative, and social processes). Initial validation with established self-report scales (N = 30 subscales) showed that these language markers reliably predict core components of well-being and underlying processes. Our results support the concurrent validity of the conceptual language model and allude to the added benefits of language-based measures, which are thought to reflect less conscious processes of well-being. Future research is needed to continue validating language markers of well-being across the lifespan in a theoretically informed and contextualized way, which will lay the foundation for inferring people's well-being from their natural language use.

References
1.
Ryan R, Deci E . On happiness and human potentials: a review of research on hedonic and eudaimonic well-being. Annu Rev Psychol. 2001; 52:141-66. DOI: 10.1146/annurev.psych.52.1.141. View

2.
Jopp D, Wozniak D, Damarin A, De Feo M, Jung S, Jeswani S . How could lay perspectives on successful aging complement scientific theory? Findings from a u.s. And a German life-span sample. Gerontologist. 2014; 55(1):91-106. PMC: 5994883. DOI: 10.1093/geront/gnu059. View

3.
Sun J, Schwartz H, Son Y, Kern M, Vazire S . The language of well-being: Tracking fluctuations in emotion experience through everyday speech. J Pers Soc Psychol. 2019; 118(2):364-387. DOI: 10.1037/pspp0000244. View

4.
Matz S, Gladstone J, Stillwell D . In a World of Big Data, Small Effects Can Still Matter: A Reply to Boyce, Daly, Hounkpatin, and Wood (2017). Psychol Sci. 2017; 28(4):547-550. DOI: 10.1177/0956797617697445. View

5.
Pennebaker J . Expressive Writing in Psychological Science. Perspect Psychol Sci. 2017; 13(2):226-229. DOI: 10.1177/1745691617707315. View