BASE-Publications: Abstracts
The Berlin Aging
Study (BASE): Overview and design
Paul B. Baltes, Karl Ulrich Mayer, Hanfried Helmchen &
Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen (1993)
Ageing and Society, 13, 483-515
This article, the introduction to
a collection of six related articles, describes the general rationale and
design of the Berlin Aging Study (BASE). The distinguishing features of BASE
are: (1) a special focus on the very old (70-105 years), (2) broad
inter-disciplinarity (medicine, psychiatry, psychology, sociology and
economics), and (3) sample heterogeneity achieved by local (West Berlin)
representativeness. In addition to discipline-specific topics, four theoretical
orientations guide the study: (1) differential ageing, (2) continuity versus
discontinuity of ageing, (3) range and limits of plasticity and reserve
capacity, and (4) ageing as an inter-dsciplinary and systemic phenomenon. To
provide a foundation and framework for the remaining articles, this paper
outlines the protocols, designs, amd measurement procedures of fourteen data
collection sessions. In addition, information is given on the samples used for
empirical analysis. Two samples from the first wave of the Berlin Aging Study
are addressed in this collection of articles. The first (N = 360), uses data
from the BASE Intake Assessment Protocol (Session 1). The second (N = 156),
employs data from the entire 14-session full protocol of BASE. Selectivity
analyses involving 22 comparison variables are reported in this paper and
demonstrate that, with the exception of 12-month mortality, these two samples
displayed the intended sample heterogeneity. those results suggest that data
from BASE hold high generalizability.