Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Martina Miche is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Martina Miche.


Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2014

Benefits of Having Friends in Older Ages: Differential Effects of Informal Social Activities on Well-Being in Middle-Aged and Older Adults

Oliver Huxhold; Martina Miche; Benjamin Schüz

OBJECTIVES It has been considered a fact that informal social activities promote well-being in old age, irrespective of whether they are performed with friends or family members. Fundamental differences in the relationship quality between family members (obligatory) and friends (voluntary), however, suggest differential effects on well-being. Further, age-related changes in networks suggest age-differential effects of social activities on well-being, as older adults cease emotionally detrimental relationships. METHOD Longitudinal representative national survey study with middle-aged (n = 2,830) and older adults (n = 2,032). Age-differential effects of activities with family members and friends on changes in life satisfaction, positive affect (PA), and negative affect (NA) were examined in latent change score models. RESULTS In the middle-aged group, activities with friends and families increased PA and life satisfaction and were unrelated to NA. In the older age group, family activities increased both PA and NA and were unrelated to changes in life satisfaction, but activities with friends increased PA and life satisfaction and decreased NA. DISCUSSION Social activities differentially affect different facets of well-being. These associations change with age. In older adults, the effects of social activities with friends may become more important and may act as a buffer against negative effects of aging.


Psychology and Aging | 2014

The influence of subjective aging on health and longevity: A meta-analysis of longitudinal data

Gerben Johan Westerhof; Martina Miche; Anne E. Barrett; Manfred Diehl; Joann M. Montepare; Hans-Werner Wahl; Susanne Wurm

Evidence is accumulating on the effects of subjective aging-that is, how individuals perceive their own aging process-on health and survival in later life. The goal of this article is to synthesize findings of existing longitudinal studies through a meta-analysis. A systematic search in PsycInfo, Web of Science, Scopus, and Pubmed resulted in 19 longitudinal studies reporting effects of subjective aging on health, health behaviors, and longevity. The authors combine the outcomes reported in these studies using a random effects meta-analysis, assuming that there would be differences in effect sizes across studies. The meta-analysis resulted in an overall significant effect of subjective aging (likelihood ratio = 1.429; 95% confidence interval = 1.273-1.604; p < .001). The analyses revealed heterogeneity, with stronger effects for studies with a shorter period of follow-up, for studies of health versus survival, for studies with younger participants (average age of the studies varies between 57 and 85 years with a median of 63 years), and for studies in welfare systems where state provisions of welfare are minimal. However, effects did not vary either across different operationalizations of subjective aging or by study quality. Subjective aging has a small significant effect on health, health behaviors, and survival. Further theoretical conceptualizations and empirical studies are needed to determine how subjective aging contributes to health and survival.


Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2014

Natural Occurrence of Subjective Aging Experiences in Community-Dwelling Older Adults

Martina Miche; Hans-Werner Wahl; Manfred Diehl; Frank Oswald; Roman Kaspar; Maren Kolb

OBJECTIVES The subjective experience of aging is a relevant correlate of developmental outcomes. However, traditional approaches fall short of capturing the inherent multidimensionality of subjective aging experiences (SAEs). Based on the concept of Awareness of Age-Related Change (AARC; Diehl, M. K., & Wahl, H.-W. (2010). Awareness of age-related change: Examination of a (mostly) unexplored concept. Journals of Gerontology: Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 65, 340-350. doi:10.1093/geronb/gbp110), this study provides a description of SAEs that is facet rich, and based on their natural occurrence, analyzes interindividual differences and associations with well-being. METHOD Data came from 225 participants (70-88 years) of the ongoing BEWOHNT study. Open-ended diary entries about age-related experiences were collected for more than 14 days and coded according to AARC domains and subdomains. RESULTS Seventy percent of all participants had SAEs about physical functioning. About half of the sample reported experiences in the domains interpersonal relations, social-emotional and social-cognitive functioning (COGN-EMOT), and lifestyle. Thirty percent experienced aging in terms of changes in cognitive functioning. Contents of SAEs varied by gender, age group, and functional status. SAEs about COGN-EMOT were most consistently related to affective components of subjective well-being. DISCUSSION Our results demonstrate the benefits of an open-ended approach to a multidimensional understanding of SAEs. Content-related, social-cognitive and social-emotional changes more than functional age-related changes were most important for well-being.


Psychology and Aging | 2014

Attitude toward own aging in midlife and early old age over a 12-year period: examination of measurement equivalence and developmental trajectories.

Martina Miche; Valerie C. Elsässer; Oliver Schilling; Hans-Werner Wahl

The Attitude Toward Own Aging Subscale (ATOA) is a frequently used measure of subjective aging. Although ATOA in midlife might assume a preparatory role for psychosocial adjustment in old age, research has been dominated by a focus on older adults. To enable a comparison of developmental trajectories of ATOA between middle-aged and young-old adults, we tested measurement invariance between age groups and over a 12-year study period. In addition, personality variables, health dimensions, and sociodemographic variables were investigated as predictors of developmental trajectories of ATOA. Data came from the Interdisciplinary Longitudinal Study of Adult Development (ILSE) with 2 birth cohorts (1930-1932: n = 500; 1950-1952: n = 501) followed over 12 years. Data analyses were conducted with confirmatory factor analysis for ordered-categorical variables and latent growth models. Support for the assumption of partial measurement invariance of ATOA was found in each age group, but not between age groups. Latent growth models revealed a steady decline in ATOA for young-old individuals, whereas ATOA trajectories in midlife were characterized by interindividual variation. Health variables predicted level of ATOA in the young-old. In midlife ATOA were shaped by a variety of factors. Future studies should be conducted with an awareness of differential item functioning of the ATOA scale across age groups. Furthermore, our results point to a greater modifiability of aging attitudes in middle-aged compared with young-old individuals, thus highlighting the importance of the midlife years in shaping developmental trajectories into old age.


Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2015

Examination of Associations Among Three Distinct Subjective Aging Constructs and Their Relevance for Predicting Developmental Correlates

Martina Miche; Hans-Werner Wahl; Manfred Diehl

Objectives This study examined (a) the empirical associations among three subjective aging (SA) constructs: felt age, attitudes toward own aging (ATOA), and awareness of age-related change (AARC); (b) the moderating role of chronological age in these associations; and (c) the predictive relevance of the SA constructs with regard to two developmental correlates: functional health and satisfaction with life. Method Participants were 819 adults aged 40-98 years from the United States and Germany. Parallel multiple mediation, moderated mediation, and hierarchical regression analyses were used. Results As hypothesized, AARC mediated the association between the global measures of SA (felt age and ATOA) and the developmental correlates. Specifically, more negative global subjective aging predicted more AARC losses, which predicted poorer health and well-being. Furthermore, this mediation pathway was moderated by chronological age, such that, with increasing age, greater AARC was more strongly related to poorer functional health (but not well-being). The multidimensional measure, AARC, accounted for a significant amount of the variance in the developmental correlates over and above the unidimensional SA constructs. A consistent pattern emerged supporting the role of domain specificity and valence. Discussion These findings support the need for conceptualizing SA across different behavioral domains and for distinguishing between positive and negative SA.


Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2013

A Latent Class Analysis of Friendship Network Types and Their Predictors in the Second Half of Life

Martina Miche; Oliver Huxhold; Nan Stevens

OBJECTIVES Friendships contribute uniquely to well-being in (late) adulthood. However, studies on friendship often ignore interindividual differences in friendship patterns. The aim of this study was to investigate such differences including their predictors. METHOD The study builds on Matthewss qualitative model of friendship styles. Matthews distinguished 3 approaches to friendship differing by number of friends, duration of friendships, and emotional closeness. We used latent class analysis to identify friendship network types in a sample of middle-aged and older adults aged 40-85 years (N = 1,876). Data came from the German Aging Survey (DEAS). RESULTS Our analysis revealed 4 distinct friendship network types that were in high congruence with Matthewss typology. We identified these as a discerning style, which focuses on few close relationships, an independent style, which refrains from close engagements, and 2 acquisitive styles that both acquire new friends across their whole life course but differ regarding the emotional closeness of their friendships. Socioeconomic status, gender, health, and network-disturbing and network-sustaining variables predicted affiliations with network types. DISCUSSION We argue that future studies should consider a holistic view of friendships in order to better understand the association between friendships and well-being in the second half of life.


Annual review of gerontology and geriatrics | 2015

The Role of Subjective Aging Within the Changing Ecologies of Aging: Perspectives for Research and Practice

Martina Miche; Manfred Diehl; Hans-Werner Wahl

The negative conceptualization of aging pervades most societies and can be seen implicitly and explicitly across many levels and contexts of society. However, there is substantial theoretical and empirical evidence to argue that a more realistic and constructive view of aging acknowledges both positive and negative changes as people grow old. In this chapter, we explore possible implications of the negative conceptualizations of aging at different bioecological levels. Then, in light of a growing body of evidence suggesting that negative views on aging have harmful effects for individuals and societies, we discuss challenges and potentials for transforming such views at the different bioecological levels to a more accurate representation of older age. Finally, we present a life-span oriented framework, which illustrates several potential avenues for research and practice at different bioecological levels, considering all points along the developmental chronosystem.


Developmental Review | 2014

Awareness of Aging: Theoretical Considerations on an Emerging Concept.

Manfred Diehl; Hans-Werner Wahl; Anne E. Barrett; Martina Miche; Joann M. Montepare; Gerben Johan Westerhof; Susanne Wurm


Zeitschrift für Gesundheitspsychologie | 2013

Exploring the Causal Interplay of Subjective Age and Health Dimensions in the Second Half of Life

Svenja M. Spuling; Martina Miche; Susanne Wurm; Hans-Werner Wahl


Annual review of gerontology and geriatrics | 2015

Subjective Aging and Awareness of Aging Toward a New Understanding of the Aging Self

Manfred Diehl; Hans-Werner Wahl; Martina Miche

Collaboration


Dive into the Martina Miche's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manfred Diehl

Colorado State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Susanne Wurm

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nan Stevens

Radboud University Nijmegen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eva C. Winkler

University Hospital Heidelberg

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge