“…While the original theory did not specify how older adults would implement these emotional priorities, subsequent theorizing proposed that older adults have chronic goals to optimize emotional well-being that require cognitive control; this proposed regulation mechanism helps older adults prioritize positive experiences and diminish the impact of negative experiences (Knight et al, 2007; Kryla-Lighthall & Mather, 2009; Mather & Carstensen, 2005; Mather & Knight, 2005; Reed & Carstensen, 2012; Reed et al, 2014). While this cognitive control model can account for a variety of positivity effect patterns (see Reed & Carstensen, 2012), the goal-directed mechanism is difficult to reconcile with findings that the positivity effect can occur quickly and that individual differences in the positivity effect are not reliably associated with executive function (Barber & Kim, 2021; Mather, 2024; see also Buecker et al, 2023). Alternative accounts of the positivity effect often consider more automatic, rather than strategic, processing (Barber & Kim, 2021; Gronchi et al, 2018; Labouvie-Vief et al, 2010; Mather, 2024).…”