# Dyadic Approaches to the Study of Adult Development and Aging: Emotion Regulation, Attitudes, and Well-Being

**Authors:** Gloria Luong

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1393 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This paper explores how interpersonal interactions, like emotion regulation and political views, influence aging and well-being in couples.

## Contribution

The paper introduces new insights into dyadic processes in adult development, focusing on emotion regulation, political convergence, and relationship success.

## Key findings

- Greater interpersonal emotion regulation is linked to better emotional and relational well-being, especially in older adults.
- Husbands in couples show more positive affect but less empathic perspective taking than wives over time.
- Couples with differing political views tend to align more over time, especially if one partner is more moderate or open to change.

## Abstract

Dyadic approaches to the study of aging provide unique opportunities to examine interpersonal processes that may shape psychological development. These four presentations include complementary methodological approaches to some of the latest advances in dyadic processes and adult psychological development. First, English and colleagues investigated interpersonal emotion regulation (IER), whereby regulators attempt to influence the emotions of a target person across two studies including daily diary and lab methods. Greater IER was associated with better emotional and relational well-being, and such effects were more pronounced for older people. Next, Luong examined how married heterosexual couples navigate the transition into older adult housing facilities together. Husbands tended to show greater positive affect and lower depressive symptoms than wives, but they also exhibited lower empathic perspective taking across the 3-5 year longitudinal study. Using three large international panel study datasets, Yang and colleagues demonstrate that romantic couples with different political orientations tend to show a convergence effect over time, such that their political views become closer aligned with their partner’s views. Partners who changed their views and/or showed more moderate political views to begin with, were more likely to have partners who changed their views in line with theirs. Finally, Chopik and colleagues used novel methodological techniques to understand how couples “match” on their love languages, and the implications that matching may have on relationship success. These talks highlight advantages to dyadic approaches to studying aging for both individuals and couples. Dyadic Health Research Interest Group Sponsored Symposium

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12763292