Psychological aging core and uniquely important features

Psychological aging core and uniquely important features

To describe how different variables contribute to psychological aging throughout human life, we trained DNNs on MIDUS 1 age group subsamples (25-39, 40-64, 65-75 years). These models contained the same 50 features as PsychoAge and Subjage, but their relative importance was not constant. In other words, a variable’s contribution to psychological aging was not static and its influence may vary with time.

First, we explored important variables (top-25 mean normalized PFI and DFS scores) shared by all age-group specific clocks to define the psychological aging core – features that significantly shift throughout one’s lifespan ( Table 2 ). Core features that determined the chronological aspect of psychological aging in MIDUS 1 contained neuroticism, seeing the community as a source of comfort and defining the lower boundary of male middle age. These features are expected to have life-long trends that let DNNs tell an old and a young person apart. Personality traits that were rendered important for human perception of age included aspirations scale, extraversion, openness, being career-oriented, and the prevalence of the positive reappraisal coping mechanism.