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The secret to successful aging is Focus on
the Positive
July 15, 2011 - Whether
we choose to accept or fight it, the fact is
that we will all age, but will we do so
successfully? Aging successfully has been
linked with the "positivity effect", a
biased tendency towards and preference for
positive, emotionally gratifying
experiences. New research published in Biological
Psychiatry now explains how and when
this effect works in the brain.
German neuroscientists
studied this effect by using neuroimaging to
evaluate brain engagement in young and old
adults while they performed a specialized
cognitive task that included supposedly
irrelevant pictures of either neutral,
happy, sad or fearful faces.
During parts of the task
when they didn't have to pay as much
attention, the elderly subjects were
significantly more distracted by the happy
faces.
When this occurred, they
had increased engagement in the part of the
brain that helps control emotions and this
stronger signal in the brain was correlated
with those who showed the greatest emotional
stability.
"Integrating our
findings with the assumptions of life span
theories we suggest that motivational
goal-shifting in healthy aging leads to a
self-regulated engagement in positive
emotions even when this is not required by
the setting," explained author Dr. Stefanie
Brassen.
"In addition, our
finding of a relationship between rostral
anterior cingulate cortex activity and
emotional stability further strengthens the
hypothesis that this increased emotional
control in aging enhances emotional well
being."
"The lessons of healthy
aging seem to be similar to those of
resilience, throughout life. As recently
summarized in other work by Drs. Dennis
Charney and Steven Southwick, when coping
with extremely stressful life challenges, it
is critical to realistically appraise the
situation but also to approach it with a
positive attitude," noted Dr. John H.
Krystal, the Editor of Biological
Psychiatry.
Lifespan theories
explain that positivity bias in later life
reflects a greater emphasis on short-term
rather than long-term priorities. The study
by Dr. Brassen and colleagues now provides
another clue to how the brain contributes to
this age-related shift in priorities.
This makes aging
successfully sound so simple – use your
brain to focus on the positive.
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