# Self- and Other-Oriented Motives, Prosociality, and Well-Being in Older Adults: An ESM Study

**Authors:** Jeanne Nakamura, Ajit Mann

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1879 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how self- and other-oriented motives for volunteering affect well-being in older adults using real-time data collection.

## Contribution

The study introduces participant-reported motives and examines co-occurring self- and other-oriented motives in real-time prosocial behavior.

## Key findings

- Other-oriented motivation, alone or combined with self-oriented motives, correlates with higher eudaimonic well-being and positive affect.
- Self-oriented motives alone are associated with lower well-being compared to other-oriented motives.
- Experience sampling method reveals fluctuating relationships between motivation, prosociality, and well-being.

## Abstract

In past research on other-related and self-related motives for volunteering, other-related motives have been associated with higher wellbeing. However, some theories of motivation would suggest that self-oriented motives, notably immediate experiential rewards, will co-occur with other-oriented motivation for older adults engaging in prosocial activity. We report research that contributes to the understanding of motivation, prosociality, and well-being in three ways. We examined the conjunction of self- and other-oriented motives in addition to their separate occurrence, and compared how these motives were linked to well-being. Because prosocial behavior, motivation, and well-being fluctuate intra-individually, we examined their relationship using the experience sampling method. Finally, given challenges with researcher classification of volunteering motives as self- or other-oriented, we studied participant-reported motives. Data came from a sample of older, high-commitment volunteers and leaders in social-purpose programs in the US (n of responses=5,501; N = 165, 58% female, age: M = 71.1, SD = 5.7). Consistent with past research, in moments when only other-oriented motivation was reported, positive correlates including eudaimonic well-being and positive affect were higher than when only self-oriented motivation was reported. Notably, a similar pattern held on occasions when other-oriented motivation co-occurred with self-oriented motivation. Theoretical and applied implications of the findings are discussed.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761642