Organisation profile
Organisation profile
Research in the field of Lifespan Psychology starts from the idea that human development is lifelong, multi-dimensional, multi-directional and multi-determined. In addition, human development is aimed at adapting the individual to his environment. Lifespan psychology therefore studies the individual in interaction with his environment. In addition to the more traditional methods of research, such as questionnaire research, experiments, etc., the Experience Sampling Method (ESM) is also used. This is a validated and internationally used structured diary technique to systematically study human experiences and behaviors in daily life as well as the context in which they take place.
The research of the department is grouped around the research themes resilience, post-traumatic growth, gratitude, positive aging, effects and effective mechanisms of coaching on mental health, and the effect of animals on well-being.
The Department of Lifespan Psychology formulates its research goals within the Research Line of Lifespan Psychology (part of UHC).
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Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
Profiles
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Tim Batink
- Department of Lifespan Psychology - Lecturer
- Research Line Lifespan psychology (part of UHC program) - Lecturer
Person: Academic
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Annelie Beijer
- Research Line Lifespan psychology (part of UHC program) - Senioir Lecturer
- Department of Lifespan Psychology - Senior Lecturer
Person: Academic
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Ineke Bodok - Mulderij, MSc
- Department of Lifespan Psychology - Researcher
- Research Line Lifespan psychology (part of UHC program) - Researcher
Person: Academic
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Capitalizing Social Networks in Midlife: Longitudinal Pathways Linking Bonding Social Capital, Social Support, Sense of Control, and Mental Well-Being
Simons, M., Reijnders, J., Beijer, A., Völlink, T. & Jacobs, N., 31 Jan 2026, (E-pub ahead of print) In: Journal of Adult Development. 13 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Academic › peer-review
Open Access -
Validation of the Dutch Multidimensional Psychological Flexibility Inventory (MPFI-60 and MPFI-24) and its predictive value for mental health
Bodok, I., Batink, T., Kroeze, W., Nijkamp, M., Peeters, S., Jacobs, N. & Reijnders, J., 16 Jan 2026, PsyArXiv, 32 p.Research output: Working paper / Preprint › Preprint
Open Access