Adaptive Digital Problem-Solving Skills for Life Management in the Middle Age
Takashi Yamashita, Donnette Narine, Giyeon Kim

TL;DR
Middle-aged adults who regularly use digital problem-solving skills are more proficient, which helps them manage life tasks effectively in a digital world.
Contribution
This study identifies the importance of regular adaptive digital problem-solving skill use in middle age for maintaining digital proficiency later in life.
Findings
Middle-aged adults using ADPS skills weekly have significantly higher proficiency (b = 15.98, p < 0.01).
Engagement with ADPS skills in middle age supports autonomy in later life within digital societies.
Abstract
Life management digital tasks, such as paying bills, checking health information, and navigating appointments online, are essential for one’s life. In today’s fast-changing society, adults must adapt and solve problems quickly using constantly evolving digital technologies. However, middle-aged and older adults tend to be more digitally divided than their younger counterparts. Practice engagement theory depicts that continuous skill use is crucial for maintaining and enhancing one’s skills over the life course. Establishing the skill use habit in earlier adult life stages may prevent being digitally left behind in later life. Therefore, the current study examined the associations between the proficiency and utilization of adaptive digital problem-solving (ADPS) skills in middle-aged adults. We used a nationally representative sample (50 years and older; n = 1,203) drawn from the 2023…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTechnology Use by Older Adults · Social Policies and Healthcare Reform · Social and Demographic Issues in Germany
