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Correlational findings

Study Moriwaki (1973): study US 1971

Public
60+ aged, retirees, Los Angeles County, USA, 1971
Sample
Respondents
N = 71
Non Response
Assessment
Interview: face-to-face
Structured interview

Correlate

Authors's Label
Supported self- disclosure
Our Classification
Related specification variables
Operationalization
Number of important life areas for which support for self-disclosure from significant others is perceived. Those persons one considers to be close and with whom one can feel free and talk about personal things were considered as 'significant others'.

Measurement by means of Supported Self-
Disclosure Index (see Jourard & Lasakow, 1958), modified to include 38 content areas of concern to the elderly, including changes in social relations with age, status and role changes, bodily changes, self-feelings, financial and material problems, and health problems.

Observed Relation with Happiness

Happiness Measure Statistics Elaboration / Remarks A-BB-cm-mq-v-2-a r = +.17 ns L-shaped curve: Stronger positive among those reporting lower self-disclosure.

When controlled for age       : rpc = +.08 (ns)
When controlled for role loss : rpc = +.17
- Low role loss               : r   = +.36 (01)
- Very high role loss         : r   = -.23 (ns)