date: 2022-02-04T05:17:33Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.4 pdf:docinfo:title: Location, Location, Location: The Role of Objective Neighborhood Characteristics for Perceptions of Control xmp:CreatorTool: Adobe InDesign 17.0 (Windows) access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: Introduction: Control beliefs can protect against age-related declines in functioning. It is unclear whether neighborhood characteristics shape how much control people perceive over their life. This article studies associations of neighborhood characteristics with control beliefs of residents of a diverse metropolitan area (Berlin, Germany). Methods: We combine self-report data about perceptions of control obtained from participants in the Berlin Aging Study II (N = 507, 60?87 years, 51% women) with multisource geo-referenced indicators of neighborhood characteristics using linear regression models. Results: Findings indicate that objective neighborhood characteristics (i.e., unemployment rate) are indeed tied to perceptions of control, in particular, how much control participants feel others have over their lives. Including neighborhood characteristics in part doubled the amount of explained variance compared with a reference model covarying for demographic characteristics only (from R2 = 0.017 to R2 = 0.030 for internal control beliefs; R2 = 0.056 to R2 = 0.102 for external control beliefs in chance; R2 = 0.006 to R2 = 0.030 for external control beliefs in powerful others). Discussion/Conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of access to neighborhood resources for control beliefs across old age and can inform interventions to build up neighborhood characteristics which might be especially helpful in residential areas with high unemployment. language: de-DE dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.4 pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: Adobe InDesign 17.0 (Windows) access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Location, Location, Location: The Role of Objective Neighborhood Characteristics for Perceptions of Control modified: 2022-02-04T05:17:33Z cp:subject: Introduction: Control beliefs can protect against age-related declines in functioning. It is unclear whether neighborhood characteristics shape how much control people perceive over their life. This article studies associations of neighborhood characteristics with control beliefs of residents of a diverse metropolitan area (Berlin, Germany). Methods: We combine self-report data about perceptions of control obtained from participants in the Berlin Aging Study II (N = 507, 60?87 years, 51% women) with multisource geo-referenced indicators of neighborhood characteristics using linear regression models. Results: Findings indicate that objective neighborhood characteristics (i.e., unemployment rate) are indeed tied to perceptions of control, in particular, how much control participants feel others have over their lives. Including neighborhood characteristics in part doubled the amount of explained variance compared with a reference model covarying for demographic characteristics only (from R2 = 0.017 to R2 = 0.030 for internal control beliefs; R2 = 0.056 to R2 = 0.102 for external control beliefs in chance; R2 = 0.006 to R2 = 0.030 for external control beliefs in powerful others). Discussion/Conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of access to neighborhood resources for control beliefs across old age and can inform interventions to build up neighborhood characteristics which might be especially helpful in residential areas with high unemployment. pdf:docinfo:subject: Introduction: Control beliefs can protect against age-related declines in functioning. It is unclear whether neighborhood characteristics shape how much control people perceive over their life. This article studies associations of neighborhood characteristics with control beliefs of residents of a diverse metropolitan area (Berlin, Germany). Methods: We combine self-report data about perceptions of control obtained from participants in the Berlin Aging Study II (N = 507, 60?87 years, 51% women) with multisource geo-referenced indicators of neighborhood characteristics using linear regression models. Results: Findings indicate that objective neighborhood characteristics (i.e., unemployment rate) are indeed tied to perceptions of control, in particular, how much control participants feel others have over their lives. Including neighborhood characteristics in part doubled the amount of explained variance compared with a reference model covarying for demographic characteristics only (from R2 = 0.017 to R2 = 0.030 for internal control beliefs; R2 = 0.056 to R2 = 0.102 for external control beliefs in chance; R2 = 0.006 to R2 = 0.030 for external control beliefs in powerful others). Discussion/Conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of access to neighborhood resources for control beliefs across old age and can inform interventions to build up neighborhood characteristics which might be especially helpful in residential areas with high unemployment. pdf:docinfo:creator: Drewelies J.; Eibich P.; Düzel S.; Kühn S.; Krekel C.; Goebel J.; Kolbe J.; Demuth I.; Lindenberger U.; Wagner G.G.; Gerstorf D. meta:author: Drewelies J.; Eibich P.; Düzel S.; Kühn S.; Krekel C.; Goebel J.; Kolbe J.; Demuth I.; Lindenberger U.; Wagner G.G.; Gerstorf D. trapped: False meta:creation-date: 2022-02-04T05:17:31Z created: 2022-02-04T05:17:31Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true Creation-Date: 2022-02-04T05:17:31Z xmpMM:DerivedFrom:DocumentID: xmp.did:45df2a95-4590-c444-bce2-8d4322bee279 Author: Drewelies J.; Eibich P.; Düzel S.; Kühn S.; Krekel C.; Goebel J.; Kolbe J.; Demuth I.; Lindenberger U.; Wagner G.G.; Gerstorf D. producer: Adobe PDF Library 16.0.3 pdf:docinfo:producer: Adobe PDF Library 16.0.3 pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 0 dc:description: Introduction: Control beliefs can protect against age-related declines in functioning. It is unclear whether neighborhood characteristics shape how much control people perceive over their life. This article studies associations of neighborhood characteristics with control beliefs of residents of a diverse metropolitan area (Berlin, Germany). Methods: We combine self-report data about perceptions of control obtained from participants in the Berlin Aging Study II (N = 507, 60?87 years, 51% women) with multisource geo-referenced indicators of neighborhood characteristics using linear regression models. Results: Findings indicate that objective neighborhood characteristics (i.e., unemployment rate) are indeed tied to perceptions of control, in particular, how much control participants feel others have over their lives. Including neighborhood characteristics in part doubled the amount of explained variance compared with a reference model covarying for demographic characteristics only (from R2 = 0.017 to R2 = 0.030 for internal control beliefs; R2 = 0.056 to R2 = 0.102 for external control beliefs in chance; R2 = 0.006 to R2 = 0.030 for external control beliefs in powerful others). Discussion/Conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of access to neighborhood resources for control beliefs across old age and can inform interventions to build up neighborhood characteristics which might be especially helpful in residential areas with high unemployment. access_permission:modify_annotations: true dc:creator: Drewelies J.; Eibich P.; Düzel S.; Kühn S.; Krekel C.; Goebel J.; Kolbe J.; Demuth I.; Lindenberger U.; Wagner G.G.; Gerstorf D. description: Introduction: Control beliefs can protect against age-related declines in functioning. It is unclear whether neighborhood characteristics shape how much control people perceive over their life. This article studies associations of neighborhood characteristics with control beliefs of residents of a diverse metropolitan area (Berlin, Germany). Methods: We combine self-report data about perceptions of control obtained from participants in the Berlin Aging Study II (N = 507, 60?87 years, 51% women) with multisource geo-referenced indicators of neighborhood characteristics using linear regression models. Results: Findings indicate that objective neighborhood characteristics (i.e., unemployment rate) are indeed tied to perceptions of control, in particular, how much control participants feel others have over their lives. Including neighborhood characteristics in part doubled the amount of explained variance compared with a reference model covarying for demographic characteristics only (from R2 = 0.017 to R2 = 0.030 for internal control beliefs; R2 = 0.056 to R2 = 0.102 for external control beliefs in chance; R2 = 0.006 to R2 = 0.030 for external control beliefs in powerful others). Discussion/Conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of access to neighborhood resources for control beliefs across old age and can inform interventions to build up neighborhood characteristics which might be especially helpful in residential areas with high unemployment. dcterms:created: 2022-02-04T05:17:31Z Last-Modified: 2022-02-04T05:17:33Z dcterms:modified: 2022-02-04T05:17:33Z title: Location, Location, Location: The Role of Objective Neighborhood Characteristics for Perceptions of Control xmpMM:DocumentID: xmp.id:c76b9fce-f8bf-4148-9a36-9d62e2e75fa1 Last-Save-Date: 2022-02-04T05:17:33Z pdf:docinfo:modified: 2022-02-04T05:17:33Z meta:save-date: 2022-02-04T05:17:33Z Content-Type: application/pdf X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Drewelies J.; Eibich P.; Düzel S.; Kühn S.; Krekel C.; Goebel J.; Kolbe J.; Demuth I.; Lindenberger U.; Wagner G.G.; Gerstorf D. dc:language: de-DE access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 10 pdf:charsPerPage: 3592 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true pdf:docinfo:trapped: False xmpMM:DerivedFrom:InstanceID: xmp.iid:f4fb4731-7865-6040-8f55-0ad823ecb509 access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:created: 2022-02-04T05:17:31Z