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Article

Adult age differences in noninstrumental information-seeking strategies.

Details

Citation

Fastrich GM, FitzGibbon L, Lau JK, Aslan S, Sakaki M & Murayama K (2024) Adult age differences in noninstrumental information-seeking strategies.. Psychology and Aging, 39 (3), pp. 313-323. https://doi.org/10.1037/pag0000806

Abstract
We often seek information without any explicit incentives or goals (i.e., noninstrumental information seeking, often noted as a manifestation of curiosity). Does noninstrumental information-seeking change with age? We tried to answer the question by making a critical distinction between two information-seeking behaviors: diversive information seeking (i.e., information seeking for topics a person knows little about) and specific information seeking (i.e., information seeking to deepen a person¡¯s existing knowledge of a topic). Five hundred participants (age range: 12¨C79 years old) spontaneously read new facts about different topics. After reading each fact, participants were given the choice to read more facts about the current topic or return to the selection menu to learn about a new topic. We found that with increasing age, participants chose to explore more facts within a topic (i.e., increased specific information seeking) and switched less frequently to new topics (i.e., decreased diversive information seeking). These results indicate that while young people seek out a broader range of information, as people grow older, they develop a preference to deepen their existing knowledge.

Keywords
information seeking; curiosity; adult development; intrinsic motivation; learning from text

Journal
Psychology and Aging: Volume 39, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Funders and
Publication date31/05/2024
Publication date online31/05/2024
Date accepted by journal31/01/2024
URL
PublisherAmerican Psychological Association (APA)
ISSN0882-7974
eISSN1939-1498

People (1)

Dr Lily FitzGibbon

Dr Lily FitzGibbon

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology

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