Psychological Well-Being and Ill-Being: Do They Have Distinct or Mirrored Biological Correlates?
University of Wisconsin–Madison · Institute on Aging · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Increasingly, researchers attend to both positive and negative aspects of mental health. Such distinctions call for clarification of whether psychological well-being and ill-being comprise opposite ends of a bipolar continuum, or are best construed as separate, independent dimensions of mental health. Biology can help resolve this query--bipolarity predicts 'mirrored' biological correlates (i.e. well-being and ill-being correlate similarly with biomarkers, but show opposite directional signs), whereas independence predicts 'distinct' biological correlates (i.e. well-being and ill-being have different biological signatures).
Multiple aspects of psychological well-being (eudaimonic, hedonic) and ill-being (depression, anxiety, anger) were assessed in a sample of aging women (n = 135, mean age = 74) on whom diverse neuroendocrine (salivary cortisol, epinephrine, norepinephrine, DHEA-S) and cardiovascular factors (weight, waist-hip ratio, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, HDL cholesterol, total/HDL cholesterol, glycosylated hemoglobin) were also measured.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
8- CDCarol D. RyffCorresponding
University of Wisconsin–Madison, Institute on Aging
- GDGayle D. Love
University of Wisconsin–Madison
- HLHeather L. Urry
University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison Group (United States)
- DMDaniel Muller
University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison Group (United States)
- MAMelissa A. Rosenkranz
University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison Group (United States)
Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Anxiety
- Psychological well-being
- Clinical psychology
- Anger
- Population
- Mental health
- Depression (economics)