6533b861fe1ef96bd12c569a
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Adult life‐styles and their precursors in the social behaviour of children and adolescents
Lea Pulkkinensubject
Longitudinal studySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesSocial changePoison control050109 social psychologyImpulsivity050105 experimental psychologyConfirmatory factor analysisDevelopmental psychologyInjury preventionmedicinePersonality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesYoung adultmedicine.symptomPsychologymedia_commondescription
165 males and 155 females (87 per cent of the sample, N = 369, first studied at age 8) were retrieved after 18 years, at the age of 26, in the Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Social Development. A mailed questionnaire, personality inventories, and criminal records were used in the analysis of adult life‐styles. Continuity in social behaviour from the age of 8 to 20 was studied earlier (Pulkkinen, 1982) within a two‐dimensional model of impulse control defined by Social Activity vs. Passivity and Strength vs. Weakness of Self‐control. The present results showed that developmental trajectories for weak and strong self‐control obtained at the earlier stages were continued in young adulthood. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses revealed that the dimensions of young adults' life‐styles were formed both by the timing of entry into family roles and by differences in activities and opinions independent of it. For the latter, two dimensions of adult life‐styles were extracted in the confirmatory analysis for the two‐dimensional structure of uncontrolled activity vs. controlled passivity and controlled activity vs. uncontrolled passivity: Relapse vs. Restraint and Resilience vs. Resentment. Their strongest predictors were the Reveller vs. Loner and the Striver vs. Loser life‐styles, in the respective order, obtained in late adolescence.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1990-09-01 | European Journal of Personality |