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Title: APC Models and Methods for Crosssectional Research Designs


1
APC Models and Methods for Cross-sectional
Research Designs
 
  • Comments on the State of the Art
  • Duane Alwin
  • Sociology and Demography
  • Penn State University

2
APC Models and MethodsIssues to address
  • (1) How important is theory?
  • (2) What are the optimal designs?
  • (3) How best do we explore available repeated
    cross-sectional surveys?
  • (4) Substantive areas as examples of application
    of APC ideas

 
3
Guidelines for sense makingwith respect to APC
models
 
  • Theoretical considerations concerning aging
    processes, impacts of historical events and
    processes, and the phenomena of cohorts and
    generations.
  • Research design and data moving beyond
    cross-sectional designs.
  • The role of exploratory methods in making sense
    of repeated cross-sections and the importance of
    looking at the data.

4
Theoretical assumptions of APCs
  • Theoretical concept
  • Aging age-related within person change
  • Historical events eras, epochs and times
  • Generations, youth movements and social change
  • APC Operationalization
  • Agebetween person differences in age
  • Periodeffects tied to the date of the survey
  • Cohortshistorical location versus historical
    participation

 
5
Theoretical Limitations of APCs
  • Theoretical concept
  • Aging age-related within person change
  • Historical events eras, epochs and times
  • Generations, youth movements and social change
  • APC Limitations
  • Between person differences are not the same thing
  • Periodan effect tied to the date of the survey
    is a limiting concept
  • Cohortshistorical location is not the same thing
    as historical participation

 
6
Beyond APC models
  • Theoretical concept
  • Aging age-related within person change
  • Historical events eras, epochs and times
  • Generations, youth movements and social change
  • Remedies
  • Latent curve models using longitudinal data
  • Read W.H. Sewells Logics of History
  • Cohorts vs. generationspay better attention to
    classical writings of Mannheim and Ryder

 
7
What is Aging?
  • Changes within persons associated with the
    passage of biographic time
  • Changes linked to species-specific biological
    (life cycle) and/or neurological processes of
    maturation and development (gains and losses)
  • Changes linked to culturally constructed
    age-graded experiences, i.e. life stages or phases

8
Example of Word FluencyGSS
  • Alwin, D.F. (1991). Family of Origin and Cohort
    Differences in Verbal Ability. American
    Sociological Review, 56, 625-638.
  • Alwin, D.F. McCammon, R.J. (1999). Aging vs.
    Cohort Interpretations of Intercohort Differences
    in GSS Verba Scores. American Sociological
    Review, 64, 272-286.
  • Alwin, D.F. McCammon, R.J. (2001). Aging,
    Cohorts and Verbal Ability. Journal of
    Gerontology Social Sciences, 56B, S151-S161.
  • Alwin, D.F. (2008). History, Cohorts, and
    Cognitive Aging. In H. Bosworth C. Hertzog
    (Eds.), Cognitive, Social and Psychological
    Development Essays in Honor of Warner Schaie.
    Washington, D.C. American Psychological
    Association.

9

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Example of Immediate Word RecallHRS
  • Alwin, D.F. and others. (2008). Population
    Processes and Cognitive Aging. In S.M. Hofer
    D.F. Alwin (Eds.), Handbook of Cognitive
    AgingInterdisciplinary Perspectives (pp. 69-89).
    Thousand Oaks, CA Sage Publications.
  • Alwin, D.F. (2008). The Aging Mind in Social and
    Historical Context. Unpublished research
    monograph.

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Logic of Growth Curve Analysis
  • Multiple group models where each group is a
    different birth cohort
  • Begin with an age-based model this is the
    conventional convergence model that assumes no
    cohort effects
  • Remove constraints on cohort-specific intercepts
    and slopes
  • Examine plots of the data and goodness-of-fit
    information

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Historical Events and Processes
 
  • How do events and processes occurring in
    historical time affect the lives of individuals?

19
Three ways to think about the effects of
historical time
  • Episodic Events e.g., wars, recessions,
    depressions, political crises
  • Eras, epochs or historical periods e.g., the
    60s, the sexual revolution, the cultural
    revolution, the womens movement, the Civil
    Rights era
  • Transitions or gradual social change

 
20
Examples
  • Research on the
  • Aging of the Baby Boomers
  • Alwin, D.F. (1998). The Political Impact of the
    Baby Boom Are there Generational Differences in
    Political Beliefs and Behavior? Generations, 22,
    4654.

 
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26
Effects of Cohort
  • Enduring attributes of persons associated with
    unique placement of birth cohorts in historical
    time
  • Result from the intersection of biographical and
    historical time
  • Linked to culturally constructed generational
    experiences

27
Generation as historical participation
  • An element of historical time
  • Common experience of participation in movements
    brought to the individual through historical
    events
  • No necessary convergence with other concepts of
    generation
  • Persons are nested in social movements and social
    organizations that are nested within time periods
    and groups of cohorts

28
References
  • Alwin, D.F. McCammon, R.J. (2003).
    Generations, Cohorts and Social Change. In J.T.
    Mortimer M.J. Shanahan (Eds.), Handbook of the
    Life Course (pp. 23-49). New York Kluwer Acadmic
    / Plenum Publishers.
  • Alwin, D.F. McCammon, R.J. (2007). Rethinking
    Generations. Research in Human Development, 4,
    219-237.
  • Alwin, D.F. (2008). Whos Talking About My
    Generation? In M. Silverstein R. Giarrusso
    (Eds.), From Generation to Generation Continuity
    and Change in Aging Families, Baltimore, MD
    Johns Hopkins University Press.

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Cohort replacement theory
  • Human beings tend to develop their beliefs and
    orientations early in adulthood.
  • Differences are likely to develop between cohorts
    due to differences in historical
    location/participation.
  • Beliefs and orientations remain relatively stable
    over the adult life span.
  • Social change results from personnel replacement

 
32
Karl Mannheim in The Problem of Generations (1952)
  • Even if the rest of ones life consisted of one
    long process of negation and destruction of the
    natural world view acquired in youth, the
    determining influence of these early impressions
    would still be predominant.

33
Ryder on Individual development
  • (p. 851) Implicit in the foregoing account of the
    interdependency of social change and cohort
    differentiation is the assumption that an
    individuals history is highly stable or at least
    continuous. The model dominating the literature
    on human development presents life as a movement
    from amorphous plasticity through mature
    competence toward terminal rigidity.

34
Ryder on Stability
  • The continuity of individual life (p. 856)A
    persons past affects his present and his present
    his future. Persistence is enhanced by the
    tendency to structure inputs, so that each will
    disturb as little as possible the previous
    cognitive, normative or even esthetic design,
    and, in the extreme, to reject dissonant items.
    An individuals life is an organic entity, and
    the successive events that constitute it are not
    random but patterned.

35
Ryder on Stability
  • The role of early socialization(p. 856)every
    society seizes upon the circumstances of birth as
    modes of allocating status, limiting the degrees
    of freedom for the persons path through life.
    Virtually every subsequent occurrence will depend
    upon the characteristics present at birth sex,
    race, kinship, birthplace and so forth.

36
Ryder on Stability
  • The role of commitment to a way of life(p.
    857)Beyond the age of noncommitment, the new
    adult begins a process of involvement in the
    various spheres of life, in which his actions and
    those of others progressively reduce the degrees
    of freedom left to him in the societal scheme.
    Within each role, once allocated, he forms a
    growing commitment to a line of activity.
    Conformity to (social structures) implies
    resistance to change.

37
Ryder on Stability
  • As life takes on a steadier tempo, routinization
    predominates(p. 858)Routines are barriers to
    change because they limit confrontation with the
    unexpected and the disturbing. Older people learn
    to exercise greater control over a narrower
    environment, and avoid risks of venturing into
    unstructured situations. The feasibility of
    personal transformation is probably limited more
    by restricted membership than by psychological
    aging.

38
Alternative theory
  • Humans do acquire their beliefs and orientations
    in young adulthood, but cohorts do not differ
    substantially in their experiences.
  • There is a great deal of heterogeneity in the
    generational experiences of a given cohort
  • Persons tend to change their positions on issues
    across the life span and remain relatively
    flexible over time.
  • Intra-cohort change, not cohort replacement, is
    responsible for the bulk of social change.

 
39
Kenneth Gergen in Life-Span Development (1980)
  • For any individual the life course seems
    fundamentally open-ended. Existing developmental
    patterns appear potentially evanescent, the
    unstable result of the particular juxtaposition
    of contemporary historical events. Even with
    full knowledge of the individuals past
    experience, one can render little more than a
    probabilistic account of the broad contours of
    future development.

40
Peter Berger in The Homeless Mind (1974)
  • Modern identity is peculiarly open Not only
    does there seem to be a great objective capacity
    for transformations of identity in later life,
    but there is also a subjective awareness and even
    readiness for such transformations.

41
Peter Berger in A Rumour of Angels (1971)
  • But even when the world of everyday life retains
    its massive taken-for-granted reality it is
    threatened by the marginal situations of human
    experience the haunting presence of
    metamorphoses.

42
Frank Musgrove in Margins of the Mind (1977)
  • The evidence suggests that adults are capable
    of more fundamental change than many
    psychologists will admit, but that
    consciousness, identity, and the self are
    far more resilient and resistant to change than
    important schools of sociology and social
    psychology will concede. We are not, in fact,
    chameleons.
  •  

43
Optimal Designs
  • Theoretical concept
  • Aging age-related within person change
  • Historical events eras, epochs and times
  • Generations, youth movements and social change
  • APC Operationalization
  • Repeated observations on the same persons
  • Historical and archival data
  • Supplemental data on cohort experiences

 
44
The Classic Identification Problem
  • There is a linear dependence among variables that
    quantify aging, period and cohort (A, P and C)
  • Age Period - Cohort
  • Period Cohort Age
  • Cohort Period Age
  • If you know any two of these variables you know
    the third
  • By removing one of the factors we can more
    clearly see the natural confounding of the other
    two

45
Implications of the Identification Problem
  • Cross-sectional comparisons of age groups include
    effects of both aging and cohort
  • Cross-time comparisons within cohorts include
    effects of both aging and period

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Final caveatMortality Selection
  • Mortality is obviously selective and to the
    extent that selectivity is linked to factors
    associated with levels of outcome variables, then
    mortality selection is a potential explanation
    for many findings of cohort effects. Indeed, it
    might be the case that such performance-linked
    selectivity in survivorship might be masking a
    true cohort effect that favors more recent born
    cohorts. Therefore a strong argument can be made
    that differential age-specific mortality rates
    should be taken into account when examining age
    differences in health-related outcomes, or when
    comparing cohorts in patterns of age-related
    within-cohort change.

49
Conclusions
  • The reality is that for many developmental
    phenomena there are plausible expectations for
    the simultaneous influence of aging, period and
    cohort factors
  • The complete understanding of human behavior must
    consider the plausibility of all of these
    influences
  • The natural confounding of the effects of aging,
    cohorts and periods in longitudinal data makes it
    difficult (if not impossible) to detect their
    independent effects

50
Conclusions (continued)
  • Historically analysts of longitudinal data have
    not made their assumptions about the effects of
    aging, cohort and period effects explicit
  • Early solutions to the identification problem in
    developmental research produced futile results
  • There are no ready made solutions to the
    confounding of aging, period and cohort effects,
    and no substitute for careful and informed
    analysis of longitudinal data
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