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  1. Jan Hofer

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Description: Previous research has shown that recalling positive influences in one’s life-story correlates with generative concern. Given findings that not everyone benefits from generative efforts uniformly, however, the present study tests if extraversion moderates this relation. In total, 147 older German adults (59 through 83 years) recalled positive influences in their lives in a brief interview session and provided self-report questionnaire data on their generative concern (Loyola Generativity Scale), generative behavior (Generative Behavior Checklist), and extraversion (Mini-IPIP scales). Results from a moderated mediation model indicate that recalled positive influences relate to generative concern, but not generative behavior. Moreover, extraversion does indeed moderate between recalled positive influences and generative concern in that the relation was significantly positive for medium and high extraversion. The findings suggest that what people learn from generative role models is generative concern rather than generative behavior. They also suggest a twofold role of extraversion for generativity: It has been found to be a predictor of generativity, but also affects what people gain from others’ generative efforts.

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