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Featured researches published by Jürgen Schupp.


Archive | 2007

The German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP) - Evolution, Scope and Enhancements

Gert G. Wagner; Joachim R. Frick; Jürgen Schupp

After the introduction in Section 2, we very briefly sketch out current theoretical and empirical developments in the social sciences. In our view, they all point in the same direction: toward the acute and increasing need for multidisciplinary longitudinal data covering a wide range of living conditions and based on a multitude of variables from the social sciences for both theoretical investigation and the evaluation of policy measures. Cohort and panel studies are therefore called upon to become truly interdisciplinary tools. In Section 3, we describe the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), in which we discuss recent improvements of that study which approach this ideal and point out existing shortcomings. Section 4 concludes with a discussion of potential future issues and developments for SOEP and other household panel studies.


Behavior Research Methods | 2011

Short assessment of the Big Five: robust across survey methods except telephone interviewing

Frieder R. Lang; Dennis John; Oliver Lüdtke; Jürgen Schupp; Gert G. Wagner

We examined measurement invariance and age-related robustness of a short 15-item Big Five Inventory (BFI–S) of personality dimensions, which is well suited for applications in large-scale multidisciplinary surveys. The BFI–S was assessed in three different interviewing conditions: computer-assisted or paper-assisted face-to-face interviewing, computer-assisted telephone interviewing, and a self-administered questionnaire. Randomized probability samples from a large-scale German panel survey and a related probability telephone study were used in order to test method effects on self-report measures of personality characteristics across early, middle, and late adulthood. Exploratory structural equation modeling was used in order to test for measurement invariance of the five-factor model of personality trait domains across different assessment methods. For the short inventory, findings suggest strong robustness of self-report measures of personality dimensions among young and middle-aged adults. In old age, telephone interviewing was associated with greater distortions in reliable personality assessment. It is concluded that the greater mental workload of telephone interviewing limits the reliability of self-report personality assessment. Face-to-face surveys and self-administrated questionnaire completion are clearly better suited than phone surveys when personality traits in age-heterogeneous samples are assessed.


Psychology and Aging | 2010

Late-life decline in well-being across adulthood in Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States : Something is seriously wrong at the end of life

Denis Gerstorf; Nilam Ram; Guy Mayraz; Mira Hidajat; Ulman Lindenberger; Gert G. Wagner; Jürgen Schupp

Throughout adulthood and old age, levels of well-being appear to remain relatively stable. However, evidence is emerging that late in life well-being declines considerably. Using long-term longitudinal data of deceased participants in national samples from Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States, we examined how long this period lasts. In all 3 nations and across the adult age range, well-being was relatively stable over age but declined rapidly with impending death. Articulating notions of terminal decline associated with impending death, we identified prototypical transition points in each study between 3 and 5 years prior to death, after which normative rates of decline steepened by a factor of 3 or more. The findings suggest that mortality-related mechanisms drive late-life changes in well-being and highlight the need for further refinement of psychological concepts about how and when late-life declines in psychosocial functioning prototypically begin. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).


Developmental Psychology | 2008

Life Satisfaction Shows Terminal Decline in Old Age: Longitudinal Evidence from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP).

Denis Gerstorf; Nilam Ram; Ryne Estabrook; Jürgen Schupp; Gert G. Wagner; Ulman Lindenberger

Longitudinal data spanning 22 years, obtained from deceased participants of the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP; N = 1,637; 70- to 100-year-olds), were used to examine if and how life satisfaction exhibits terminal decline at the end of life. Changes in life satisfaction were more strongly associated with distance to death than with distance from birth (chronological age). Multiphase growth models were used to identify a transition point about 4 years prior to death where the prototypical rate of decline in life satisfaction tripled from -0.64 to -1.94 T-score units per year. Further individual-level analyses suggest that individuals dying at older ages spend more years in the terminal periods of life satisfaction decline than individuals dying at earlier ages. Overall, the evidence suggests that late-life changes in aspects of well-being are driven by mortality-related mechanisms and characterized by terminal decline.


BMJ | 2015

Long working hours and alcohol use : systematic review and meta-analysis of published studies and unpublished individual participant data.

Marianna Virtanen; Markus Jokela; Solja T. Nyberg; Ida E. H. Madsen; Tea Lallukka; Kirsi Ahola; Lars Alfredsson; G. David Batty; Jakob B. Bjorner; Marianne Borritz; Hermann Burr; Annalisa Casini; Els Clays; Dirk De Bacquer; Nico Dragano; Raimund Erbel; Jane E. Ferrie; Eleonor Fransson; Mark Hamer; Katriina Heikkilä; Karl-Heinz Jöckel; Anders Knutsson; Markku Koskenvuo; Karl-Heinz Ladwig; Thorsten Lunau; Martin L. Nielsen; Maria Nordin; Tuula Oksanen; Jan Hyld Pejtersen; Jaana Pentti

Objective To quantify the association between long working hours and alcohol use. Design Systematic review and meta-analysis of published studies and unpublished individual participant data. Data sources A systematic search of PubMed and Embase databases in April 2014 for published studies, supplemented with manual searches. Unpublished individual participant data were obtained from 27 additional studies. Review methods The search strategy was designed to retrieve cross sectional and prospective studies of the association between long working hours and alcohol use. Summary estimates were obtained with random effects meta-analysis. Sources of heterogeneity were examined with meta-regression. Results Cross sectional analysis was based on 61 studies representing 333 693 participants from 14 countries. Prospective analysis was based on 20 studies representing 100 602 participants from nine countries. The pooled maximum adjusted odds ratio for the association between long working hours and alcohol use was 1.11 (95% confidence interval 1.05 to 1.18) in the cross sectional analysis of published and unpublished data. Odds ratio of new onset risky alcohol use was 1.12 (1.04 to 1.20) in the analysis of prospective published and unpublished data. In the 18 studies with individual participant data it was possible to assess the European Union Working Time Directive, which recommends an upper limit of 48 hours a week. Odds ratios of new onset risky alcohol use for those working 49-54 hours and ≥55 hours a week were 1.13 (1.02 to 1.26; adjusted difference in incidence 0.8 percentage points) and 1.12 (1.01 to 1.25; adjusted difference in incidence 0.7 percentage points), respectively, compared with working standard 35-40 hours (incidence of new onset risky alcohol use 6.2%). There was no difference in these associations between men and women or by age or socioeconomic groups, geographical regions, sample type (population based v occupational cohort), prevalence of risky alcohol use in the cohort, or sample attrition rate. Conclusions Individuals whose working hours exceed standard recommendations are more likely to increase their alcohol use to levels that pose a health risk.


SOEPpapers on Multidisciplinary Panel Data Research | 2009

Measuring Trust: Experiments and Surveys in Contrast and Combination

Michael Naef; Jürgen Schupp

Trust is a concept that has attracted - significant attention in economic theory and research within the last two decades: it has been applied in a number of contexts and has been investigated both as an explanatory and as a dependent variable. In this paper, we explore the questions of what exactly is measured by the diverse survey-derived scales and experiments claiming to measure trust, and how these different measures are related. Using nationally representative data, we test a commonly used experimental measure of trust for robustness to a number of interferences, finding it to be mostly unsusceptible to stake size, the extent of strategy space, the use of the strategy method, and the characteristics of the experimenters. Inspired by criticism of the widespread trust question used in many surveys, we created a new, improved survey trust scale consisting of three short statements. We show that the dimension of this scale is distinct from trust in institutions and trust in known others. Our new scale is a valid and reliable measure of trust in strangers. The scale is valid in the sense that it correlates with trusting behaviour in the experiment. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the test-retest reliability of six weeks is high. The experimental measure of trust is, on the other hand, not significantly correlated with trust in institutions nor with trust in known others. We therefore conclude that the experimental measure of trust refers not to trust in a general sense, but specifically to trust in strangers.


Psychology and Aging | 2010

Late-Life Decline in Well-Being Across Adulthood in Germany, the UK, and the US: Something is Seriously Wrong at the End of Life

Denis Gerstorf; Nilam Ram; Guy Mayraz; Mira Hidajat; Ulman Lindenberger; Gert G. Wagner; Jürgen Schupp

Throughout adulthood and old age, levels of well-being appear to remain relatively stable. However, evidence is emerging that late in life well-being declines considerably. Using long-term longitudinal data of deceased participants in national samples from Germany, the UK, and the US, we examine how long this period lasts. In all three nations and across the adult age range, well-being was relatively stable over age, but declined rapidly with impending death. Articulating notions of terminal decline associated with impending death, we identified prototypical transition points in each study between three and five years prior to death, after which normative rates of decline steepened by a factor of three or more. The findings suggest that mortality-related mechanisms drive late-life changes in well-being and highlight the need for further refinement of psychological concepts about how and when late-life declines in psychosocial functioning prototypically begin.


Psychology and Aging | 2011

Long-Term Antecedents and Outcomes of Perceived Control

Frank J. Infurna; Denis Gerstorf; Nilam Ram; Jürgen Schupp; Gert G. Wagner

Perceived control plays an important role in shaping development throughout adulthood and old age. Using data from the adult lifespan sample of the national German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP; N > 10,000, covering 25 years of measurement), we explored long-term antecedents, correlates, and outcomes of perceived control and examined if associations differ with age. Targeting correlates and antecedents of control, findings indicated that higher concurrent levels of social participation, life satisfaction, and self-rated health as well as more positive changes in social participation over the preceding 11 years were each predictive of between-person differences in perceived control. Targeting health outcomes of control, survival analyses revealed that perceived control predicted 14-year hazard ratio for disability (n = 996 became disabled) and mortality (n = 1,382 died). The effect for mortality, but not for disability, was independent of sociodemographic and psychosocial factors. Overall, we found very limited support for age-differential associations. Our results provide further impetus to thoroughly examine processes involved in antecedent-consequent relations among perceived control, facets of social life, well-being, and health.


Psychology and Aging | 2010

Where people live and die makes a difference : Individual and geographic disparities in well-being progression at the end of life

Denis Gerstorf; Nilam Ram; Jan Goebel; Jürgen Schupp; Ulman Lindenberger; Gert G. Wagner

Life-span psychological research has long been interested in the contextual embeddedness of individual development. To examine whether and how regional variables relate to between-person disparities in the progression of late-life well-being, we applied three-level growth curve models to 24-year longitudinal data from deceased participants of the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (N = 3,427; age at death = 18 to 101 years). Results indicated steep declines in well-being with impending death, with some 8% of the between-person differences in both level and decline of well-being reflecting between-county differences. Exploratory analyses revealed that individuals living and dying in less affluent counties reported lower late-life well-being, controlling for key individual predictors, including age at death, gender, education, and household income. The regional variables examined did not directly relate to well-being change but were found to moderate (e.g., amplify) the disparities in change attributed to individual variables. Our results suggest that resource-poor counties provide relatively less fertile grounds for successful aging until the end of life and may serve to exacerbate disparities. We conclude that examinations of how individual and residential characteristics interact can further our understanding of individual psychological outcomes and suggest routes for future inquiry.


Zeitschrift Fur Soziologie | 2009

25 Jahre Sozio-oekonomisches Panel - Ein Infrastrukturprojekt der empirischen Sozial- und Wirtschaftsforschung in Deutschland

Jürgen Schupp

Zusammenfassung Die Längsschnittstudie Sozio-oekonomisches Panel (SOEP) stellt seit nunmehr 25 Jahren für die sozial-, verhaltens- und wirtschaftswissenschaftliche Grundlagenforschung Mikrodaten bereit. Der Beitrag präsentiert einen Überblick dieser national wie international bedeutsamen Infrastruktureinrichtung der empirischen Sozialforschung und verdeutlicht, dass die Daten des SOEP in zweifacher Hinsicht von besonderem soziologischen Interesse sind. Einmal erlauben sie eine jährlich wiederholbare repräsentative Situationsanalyse, die auch die Veränderungsprozesse deutlich macht und damit einen Beitrag zur Beschreibung des sozialen Wandels in Deutschland leistet. Zum anderen bieten die Daten die Basis, um theoretische Erklärungsansätze für das Verhalten von Individuen, von Haushalten, von Gruppen und Gesellschaften zu testen und damit zu einer empirisch fundierten Theorieentwicklung beizutragen. Seit 1988 werden regelmäßig Beiträge, die auf dem SOEP als Datenbasis beruhen, in der Zeitschrift für Soziologie veröffentlicht. Es wird dargelegt, dass nicht nur der Anteil quantitativ-empirisch ausgerichteter Beiträge in der ZfS in den letzten 20 Jahren stetig gewachsen, sondern auch der „Gesamt-Impact“ des SOEP an der Zeitschrift nachhaltig gestiegen ist. Das SOEP ist mit 34 Beiträgen mittlerweile der mit Abstand wichtigste Mikrodatensatz für quantitativ ausgerichtete Beiträge in der Zeitschrift für Soziologie. Summary The longitudinal German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study has been providing microdata for social, behavioral, and economic research for over 25 years. This paper presents an overview of this nationally and internationally important infrastructural facility for empirical social research, and shows that SOEP data are of key sociological interest in two respects. Firstly, they allow for annual representative situation analyses, which contribute to describing social change in Germany. Secondly, the data offer a basis for testing theoretical explanations of the behavior of individuals, households, groups and societies, thereby providing a strong empirical foundation for theory building. Since 1988, papers based on SOEP data have been published regularly in the Zeitschrift für Soziologie. It is shown here that not only has the percentage of quantitative empirical papers in ZfS increased constantly over the last 20 years, but also that the SOEP’s contribution to the “total impact” of the journal has risen continually over this period. With 34 papers, the SOEP is now by far the most important microdata set for quantitatively oriented papers in the Zeitschrift für Soziologie.

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Elke Holst

German Institute for Economic Research

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Martin Kroh

German Institute for Economic Research

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David Richter

German Institute for Economic Research

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Jan Goebel

German Institute for Economic Research

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Markus M. Grabka

German Institute for Economic Research

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Denis Gerstorf

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Nilam Ram

Pennsylvania State University

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