Linguistic Distancing on Social Media: Indicators of Emotion Regulation Across Age Groups

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Summary

This paper investigates linguistic distancing as an indicator of emotion regulation across age groups using social media text, finding that linguistic distancing increases with age, consistent with improved well-being in older adults.

arXiv:2606.30957v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Managing our emotional responses to events is key to emotional well-being, a process referred to as emotion regulation in psychology. Previous work has established that the degree to which we distance events is a type of emotion regulation. When we psychologically distance from events there can be markers in our language. These markers have been referred to as linguistic distancing. We build upon a previous metric to operationalize linguistic distancing, and explore how it changes across the lifespan. We explore this systematically by analyzing large amounts of social media text, a venue where people express their emotions. By investigating how distancing varies across age groups we can better understand how emotion regulation varies with age and provide initial benchmarks on social media data. We provide additional evidence further strengthening the hypothesis that linguistic distancing occurs in proportionally more instances with age. These findings align with past work in psychology which indicate improved well-being with older age. Better understanding how linguistic distancing changes with age is important because it functions as a marker of well-being and can inform effective health interventions. We provide a foundation for further exploring emotion regulation through linguistic distancing in text data.
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# Linguistic Distancing on Social Media: Indicators of Emotion Regulation Across Age Groups
Source: [https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957)
###### Abstract

Managing our emotional responses to events is key to emotional well\-being, a process referred to as emotion regulation in psychology\. Previous work has established that the degree to which we distance events is a type of emotion regulation\. When we psychologically distance from events there can be markers in our language\. These markers have been referred to as linguistic distancing\. We build upon a previous metric to operationalize linguistic distancing, and explore how it changes across the lifespan\. We explore this systematically by analyzing large amounts of social media text, a venue where people express their emotions\. By investigating how distancing varies across age groups we can better understand how emotion regulation varies with age and provide initial benchmarks on social media data\. We provide additional evidence further strengthening the hypothesis that linguistic distancing occurs in proportionally more instances with age\. These findings align with past work in psychology which indicate improved well\-being with older age\. Better understanding how linguistic distancing changes with age is important because it functions as a marker of well\-being and can inform effective health interventions\. We provide a foundation for further exploring emotion regulation through linguistic distancing in text data\.

Keywords:Linguistic Distancing, Age, Emotion Regulation, Social Media

\\NAT@set@cites

Linguistic Distancing on Social Media: Indicators of Emotion Regulation Across Age Groups

Daniela Teodorescuα∗, Saif M\. Mohammad†, Alona Fysheα∗‡αAlberta Machine Intelligence Institute,∗Department of Computing Science, University of Alberta†National Research Council Canada,‡Department of Psychology, University of Alberta\{dteodore,alona\}@ualberta\.ca, saif\.mohammad@nrc\-cnrc\.gc\.caAbstract content

## 1\. Introduction

Our everyday emotional experiences are not static but rather dynamic and our emotions are constantly changing over time\. The way in which our emotional experiences change over time creates an emotional trajectory, or what some refer to as anemotion arcMohammad \([2011](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib15)\); J\.et al\.\([2016](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib16)\)\. Emotion regulation includes the processes by which “we influence which emotions we have, when we have them, and how we experience and express them”Gross \([1998](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib6)\)\. More simply put, emotion regulation is the way in which we manage our emotions\.

Emotion regulation is key to overall well\-being; dysregulation of emotions is associated with psychopathologies such as major depressive disorder and social anxiety disorderAldaoet al\.\([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib5)\)\. There are various ways \(or strategies\) of regulating emotions and some of these are seen asmaladaptive\. While such strategies provide momentary relief from distress, they are not effective in the long term\. Maladaptive strategies include rumination \(re\-thinking about memories or negative experiences\), avoidance \(of a situation or emotional experience\), and suppression \(of emotions or thoughts\), and each of these has been shown to be significantly associated with anxiety, eating disorders, and substance abuseAldaoet al\.\([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib5)\)\. On the other hand, some strategies are consideredadaptiveand are seen as healthy ways of managing emotions, e\.g\., reappraisal \(changing how one thinks about a situation to change emotional reactions\), problem solving \(taking actions to solve a problem\), and acceptance \(non\-judgmental acceptance of emotions\)\. Adaptive strategies are seen as aiding against psychopathology and use of such strategies are inversely associated with psychopathologyAldaoet al\.\([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib5)\)\.

Given the importance of emotion regulation to well\-being, understanding how it changes with age is important for providing appropriate support and interventions\. The specific emotion regulation strategies used change throughout childhood, adolescence, young adulthood, and adulthoodNooket al\.\([2020](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib27)\)\. For example, a shift has been found from emotion regulation strategies which deal with a situation behaviorally \(e\.g\., escaping a situation\), to more cognitive strategies such as seeking informationBrownet al\.\([1991](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib31)\); Altshuleret al\.\([1995](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib30)\)\. Although there are some conflicting findings on how exactly various strategies track with age, many studies point to older ages having “enhanced emotion regulation”Urry and Gross \([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib7)\), being better at regulating their emotionsGrosset al\.\([1997](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib8)\); Mikkelsenet al\.\([2024](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib9)\), and have better overall well\-being than younger adults despite losses physically and cognitivelyUrry and Gross \([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib7)\); Stawskiet al\.\([2008](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib32)\)\.

Another lens through which emotion regulation has been studied is psychological distancing\. By creating distance from an event, one can better handle their emotions related to the event and view the event objectively \(allowing for a reappraisal of the event\)\. Adopting a distanced perspective has been shown to down\-regulate negative affectKross and Ayduk \([2017](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib10)\), and it is a common technique used in Cognitive\-Behavioral TherapyBeck and Beck \([2020](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib11)\)and Dialectical Behavior TherapyLinehan \([1993](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib12)\)\. When psychologically distancing from an event, one is viewing the event from a third\-person perspective, and often psychological distancing appears in language as markers\. For example, when distancing, there are less first\-person pronouns and more past and future tense verbs rather than present tense verbs\. These markers are described vialinguistic distancingNooket al\.\([2017](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib1)\)\. Linguistic distancing has been shown to be associated with successful emotion regulation and reduced negative affectNooket al\.\([2017](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib1)\)\. Further, in client\-therapist transcripts, less linguistic distancing was associated with worse internalizing symptoms \(inward focused behaviors often occurring with anxiety and depression\)Nooket al\.\([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib2)\)\.

Through linguistic distancing we can study emotion regulation in text; although so far only client\-therapist transcripts have been analyzed for select age groups\. While linguistic distancing has been explored across childhood, adolescence, and young adultsCohenet al\.\([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib18)\); Nooket al\.\([2020](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib27)\), we do not know how it changes over adulthood which is what we address in our work\. While one approach to measuring linguistic distancing across ages is through longitudinal research, that is very difficult as it would require text data from the same people across all the decades\. Instead, we conduct cross\-sectional research, which has its own benefits, but appropriate conclusions must be drawn that are different from what could be drawn from longitudinal research\. Additionally, linguistic distancing could be influenced by the era in which people grew up; e\.g\., those in a certain age group may use more distancing due to world events, culture, social norms, etc\. than other generations\. Therefore, we explore how linguistic distancing changes incontemporarytimes using a platform which many of use to communicate: social media\.

Social media is a platform where we frequently communicate and express our feelings\. Platforms such as Reddit and X provide a space where we can freely express our thoughts at any time of day, connect with others, and possibly receive support\. Given the important role social media plays in everyday communication, as researchers we make use of large amounts of data to analyze linguistic distancing in a systematic way across adulthood\. We explore how linguistic distancing varies across age groups on social media\. We make use of a social media dataset annotated with the age of the author at the time of posting to answer the following research questions:

- •How does linguistic distancing vary across age groups? We hypothesize that linguistic distancing increases with age as people become better at regulating emotions based on literature in psychology\.
- •How do the variousdimensionsof linguistic distancing \(i\.e\., social distancing, temporal distancing, passive voice and abstractness\) vary across age groups? Do some dimensions change more than others across adulthood?

By answering these questions, we provide important findings on how linguistic distancing tracks across age groups on social media\. Through linguistic distancing, our findings allow us to better understand emotion regulation on a larger scale across age, enabling further study of this phenomenon in psychology and the social sciences\. We make our code publicly available\.111[https://github\.com/dteodore/Age\-\-Linguistic\_Distancing](https://github.com/dteodore/Age--Linguistic_Distancing)

## 2\. Related Work

Below we describe past work examining the relationship between emotion regulation, linguistic distancing and how they change across the lifespan\. Afterwards, we describe markers of distancing in language\.

### 2\.1\. Emotion Regulation, Linguistic Distancing & Age

Appropriately regulating emotions is key to mental health and well\-being\. Vast amounts of literature point to dysregulation of emotions being tied with psychopathology such as major depressive disorder and anxiety disordersGross and Muñoz \([1995](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib20)\); Sheppeset al\.\([2015](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib34)\); Aldaoet al\.\([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib5)\)\. The various ways in which we manage our emotions are related with health outcomes: adaptive strategies such as cognitive reappraisal are significantly associated with positive indicators of mental health, whereas maladaptive strategies such as suppression of emotions are significantly associated with negative indicators of mental healthHuet al\.\([2014](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib19)\)\. Emotion regulation also changes throughout the lifespan\. Infants have minimal to no control over their emotions, relying on their caregiver for supportBowlby \([1969](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib21)\)\. Infants begin to develop approaches such as changing their eye gaze to focus on other objects as a way of signaling autonomous emotion regulationDerryberry and Rothbart \([1988](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib22)\)\. As they become toddlers, they begin to understand language which opens a whole new world in terms of emotion regulation\. Now, they can begin to understand instructions from their parentsThompson \([1991](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib35)\)and they can begin to express how they feel and socialize with others, learning to differentiate between positive and negative emotionsGross and Muñoz \([1995](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib20)\)\. In adolescence, more sophisticated strategies develop, such as reappraisal as well as maladaptive strategiesGross and Muñoz \([1995](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib20)\); Hallet al\.\([1993](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib36)\); Félix\-Ortizet al\.\([1995](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib37)\)\. While overall findings point to older age being associated with better overall well\-being, control of emotions, and enhanced emotion regulationUrry and Gross \([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib7)\); Grosset al\.\([1997](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib8)\), there are some discrepancies in exactly how emotion regulation changes with age, such as which strategies do we use more vs\. less\. For example, some work foundsuppressiondecreased across the life spanJohn and Gross \([2004](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib23)\); De France and Hollenstein \([2019](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib24)\), whereas others foundsuppressionincreased with ageBrummeret al\.\([2014](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib26)\)\.De France and Hollenstein \([2019](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib24)\)found adolescents useddistractionandsuppressionmore than young adults, and young adults used morerumination, whereasSütterlinet al\.\([2012](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib25)\)found no differences inruminationacross ages\.John and Gross \([2004](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib23)\)foundreappraisalincreased across the lifespan, whereasDe France and Hollenstein \([2019](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib24)\)found no difference\. Given the conflicting findings, we use social media data to examine howreappraisalchanges across the lifespan\.

We specifically study reappraisal through linguistic distancing\. Linguistic distancing has been studied across children, adolescents, and young adults when performing a reappraisal task, however no differences across ages was foundNooket al\.\([2020](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib27)\)\. Although there were changes in the exact strategies of cognitive reappraisal employed across ages:changing circumstancesanddistancingincreased across age;changing consequencesdecreased across age; and adolescences used morechallenging realityand lessproblem\-solvingcompared to other ages\. Linguistic distancing has also been studied specifically in adolescents: more linguistic distancing was associated with lower levels of hopelessness and higher levels of perceived agency, whereas greater use of linguistic distancing predicted fewer depressive symptoms in follow\-upsCohenet al\.\([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib18)\)\. While these studies provide findings for ages 10–23Nooket al\.\([2020](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib27)\)and 13–16Cohenet al\.\([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib18)\), we are interested in changes across a vast range of ages i\.e\., 13–70’s\. Further, we investigate the natural use of linguistic distancing as it appears in everyday communication \(e\.g\., social media\), whereas past findings in psychology were based on self\-reports and questionnaires \(e\.g\., Emotion Regulation Questionnaire \(ERQ\)Gross and John \([2003](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib17)\), Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire \(CERQ\)Garnefski and Kraaij \([2007](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib33)\)\) or reappraisal tasks\. While past work has created a corpus for detecting coping strategies in textTroianoet al\.\([2024](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib57)\), which is very intertwined with emotion regulation \(coping strategies take direct action to manage distress\), we study naturally occurring text \(rather than text from role\-playing scenarios\) and are interested in this phenomenon across ages\.

### 2\.2\. Distancing in Language

Distancing can occur through various dimensions, such as in terms of time, space and socially \(Construal Level TheoryLiberman and Trope \([2008](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib29)\); Trope and Liberman \([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib28)\)\)\. Therefore, past operationalizations of linguistic distancing include measures ofsocial distancingandtemporal distancing\. Use of more first\-person singular pronouns e\.g\., “I”, “me”, “mine” represents a more immersed perspective and lesssocialdistancing, which means that one is performing less psychological distancing\. On the other hand, using more second\- and third\-person pronouns e\.g\., “she”, “they”, “them” represents using moresociallydistanced language, and therefore one is doing more psychological distancing\. Using more present tense verbs represents lesstemporal distancingand less psychological distancing, whereas using more past\- and future\-tense signals moretemporaldistancing and therefore more psychological distancingNooket al\.\([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib2)\)\. We use these definitions ofsocialandtemporaldistancing in our work\. The bidirectional relationship between emotion regulation and linguistic signatures of psychological distancing has been shownNooket al\.\([2017](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib1)\)\. Regulating emotions through psychological distancing has been associated with increased linguistic markers of social and temporal distance\. Likewise, using distanced language also regulated emotions and reduced negative affectNooket al\.\([2017](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib1)\)\. Self\-distancing \(“I” vs\. “you” pronouns\) and social withdrawal \(indicated by more “they” pronouns\), has been explored on Reddit for healthcare workers during the COVID\-19 pandemic, however we are interested in linguistic distancing on a broader scale \(i\.e\., for those beyond the healthcare field\) and in day\-to\-day contexts outside of the pandemicIrelandet al\.\([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib56)\)\.

When distancing from an event psychologically, this creates a more abstract mental representation of the event – leading to a high correlation between linguistic measures of psychological distancing andabstractnessNooket al\.\([2025](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib3)\)\. Measures of linguistic distancing andabstractnesshave been found to be highly correlated;abstractnessincreased when cognitive reappraisal was used to regulate emotions; when people distanced their language,abstractnessalso increased; and lastly, increasedabstractnesswhen regulating emotions was correlated with regulation successNooket al\.\([2025](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib3)\)\. Given the established relationship betweenabstractnessand linguistic distancing, we also incorporate a measure ofabstractnessin our metric of linguistic distancing\.

Work in psychology has also pointed to the relationship between using passive voice and psychological distancingChan and Maglio \([2020b](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib4),[a](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib38)\)\.Passive voiceis where the object is placed before the verb such that the subject receives the action rather than performing it \(e\.g\., passive voice: “The ball was thrown by the child” vs\. active voice: “The child threw the ball”\)\.222https://www\.grammarly\.com/blog/grammar/passive\-voice/When reading passages in passive voice participants reported feeling temporal, hypothetical, and spatial distance from the events in the passage resulting in a more abstract mental construalChan and Maglio \([2020a](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib38)\); Trope and Liberman \([2003](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib39)\)\. Past work has also studied passive voice in the context of assault, where distancing removed the action from the actor and places blame on the victimBohner \([2001](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib41)\)\. When using passive voice, the agency of the subject is taken away, creating distance from the action\.

Given the past literature demonstrating the relationship between linguistic distancing withsocialdistancing,temporaldistancing,abstractness, andpassive voice, we construct a measure of linguistic distancing which includes all four dimensions\. Analyzing how each of these dimensions changes across adulthood is informative for understanding behaviors and tendencies which is of interest not only to psychologists, linguists, and sociologists, but is also linked with mental health\.

Age Group\#PostsTUSC\-CityReddit13–1994,8579,281,05520–29406,02715,455,42630–39462,2386,151,75740–49360,9461,220,49850–59278,809449,23060–69218,008246,39870–7997,432160,465Table 1:The number of posts across the age groups in each subset of theAgeCorpus\.

## 3\. Dataset: AgeCorpus

We perform our experiments onAgeCorpus, a social media dataset containing posts annotated with the author’s age at the time of writingTeodorescuet al\.\([2026](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib40)\)\. The dataset contains posts from both Reddit and X, making it a suitable dataset for exploring linguistic distance on social media platforms\. Further, there are a large number of posts in the dataset, allowing us to aggregate results per age group\. The dataset was collected by identifying instances where authors self\-disclosed their age e\.g\., “I am X years old” or “Me \[20F\] and my best friend \[21M\]”\. Using various high quality pattern matching templates, the age of an author can be determined at a point in time based on the timestamp of the post \(seed post\)\. We show the pattern templates used in Appendix[A](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#A1)\. Using the age declared at the given timestamp in the seed post, the author’s age can be determined for any other post based on the difference of the timestamp to that of the seed post’s\. The dataset consists of thousands of users each with hundreds of posts spanning from 2010–2022 for Reddit and 2020–2021 for X\. We show the exact number of posts per age group in Table[1](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#S2.T1)\. The X component of the dataset consists ofTUSC\-CountryandTUSC\-Citywhich differ in how they were collected\. TUSC\-City was collected using Twitter’s free API for American and Canadian cities during 2020–2021\. Whereas TUSC\-Country was collected using Twitter’s Academic API for tweets from the US and Canada during 2015–2021\. Our results on the two subsets are very similar so we report those on TUSC\-City since it is the larger subset and show the results on TUSC\-City in the Appendix \(Section[C](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#A3)\)\. We use this dataset for our experiments described in the next section\.

DatasetMetricdf1df2F\-statisticP\-valueEffect Size \(estω\\omega2\)RedditLinguistic61203317\.1017703\.63p<<\.0010\.003TUSC\-CityLinguistic6539267\.682830\.26p<<\.0010\.009Table 2:The degrees of freedom \(for the numerator and denominator\), F\-statistic, p\-value, and effect size in the one\-way Welch’s ANOVA test for differences in linguistic distancing between age groups\.
## 4\. Experiments

In the sections below we describe our methods for exploring how linguistic distancing varies across age groups\.

### 4\.1\. Computing Linguistic Distancing in Text

We build onNooket al\.\([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib2)\)’s work on computing linguistic distancing in text\. Specifically, the authors operationalize linguistic distancing as being composed of two components:socialdistancing andtemporaldistancing\.Socialdistancing is measured through the proportions of pronouns present in the text\. Fewer first\-person singular pronouns are associated with proportionally more instances of distancing\. Here, we analyze the proportions of pronouns present in an instance or a post\. More specifically,socialdistancing is computed per post\. Letf1​p,sg,f1​p,pl,f2​p,f3​p,sg,f3​p,plf\_\{\\mathrm\{1p,sg\}\},f\_\{\\mathrm\{1p,pl\}\},f\_\{\\mathrm\{2p\}\},f\_\{\\mathrm\{3p,sg\}\},f\_\{\\mathrm\{3p,pl\}\}denote the corresponding frequencies of first\-person singular, first\-person plural, second\-person, third\-person singular and third\-person plural pronouns respectively\. Then the social distancing \(s​o​c​i​a​lsocial\) component of linguistic distancing \(L​DLD\) per post or instance \(tt\) is computed as:

L​Ds​o​c​i​a​l​\(t\)=f2​p\+f1​p,pl\+f3​p,sg\+f3​p,plf2​p\+f1​p,pl\+f3​p,sg\+f3​p,pl\+f1​p,sgLD\_\{social\}\(t\)=\\frac\{f\_\{\\mathrm\{2p\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{1p,pl\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{3p,sg\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{3p,pl\}\}\}\{f\_\{\\mathrm\{2p\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{1p,pl\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{3p,sg\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{3p,pl\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{1p,sg\}\}\}
Temporaldistancing is captured through the use of verb tense\. More past and future tense verbs are associated with proportionally more instances of distancing\. We computetemporaldistancing per post\. Letfpast,fpresent,ffuturef\_\{\\mathrm\{past\}\},f\_\{\\mathrm\{present\}\},f\_\{\\mathrm\{future\}\}denote the corresponding frequencies of past\-tense, present\-tense and future\-tense verbs\. Then the temporal distancing \(t​e​m​ptemp\) component of linguistic distancing \(L​DLD\) per post or instance \(tt\) is computed as:

L​Dt​e​m​p​\(t\)=fpast\+ffuturefpast\+ffuture\+fpresentLD\_\{temp\}\(t\)=\\frac\{f\_\{\\mathrm\{past\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{future\}\}\}\{f\_\{\\mathrm\{past\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{future\}\}\+f\_\{\\mathrm\{present\}\}\}
We further build on the metric for linguistic distancing by including a measure ofabstractnessandpassive voice\. We includeabstractnessin our measure of linguistic distancing as more abstract mental representations of an event are linked with more successful emotion regulation, and more abstract language is highly correlated with more distanced languageNooket al\.\([2025](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib3)\)\. More details on this are described in Section[2](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#S2)\. To quantifyabstractnesswe use a word list with ratings of concreteness for forty\-thousand wordsBrysbaertet al\.\([2014](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib13)\)\.333We opt for this method of determining abstractness sinceNooket al\.\([2025](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib3)\)use the LIWC Lexicon[Pennebaker and others](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib55), which is not freely available\.Each word is rated on a 5\-point scale from abstract to concrete which we invert to be consistent with other measures\. We calculate theabstractnessscore \(L​Da​b​sLD\_\{abs\}\) per post \(tt\) as the average of the abstractness score of each word at indexii\(a​b​s​\(ti\)abs\(t\_\{i\}\)\) of the instance with lengthnn:

L​Da​b​s​\(t\)=1n​∑i=1na​b​s​\(ti\)LD\_\{abs\}\(t\)=\\frac\{1\}\{n\}\\sum\_\{i=1\}^\{n\}abs\(t\_\{i\}\)
Lastly, we determine whether a text containspassive voiceor not using the PassivePy toolSepehriet al\.\([2023](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib14)\)\. PassivePy uses POS tagging, dependency parsing and rule\-based matching for sentence structures/forms in order to determine whether passive voice is present in the text or not\. We integrate this binary score of passive voice \(p​a​s​s​\(t\)pass\(t\)\) per instance \(tt\) into our metric for linguistic distancing\.

L​Dp​a​s​s​\(t\)=p​a​s​s​\(t\)LD\_\{pass\}\(t\)=pass\(t\)
Each of these measures are on different scales\. Therefore, we standardize all the scores for each dimension individually such that each dimension has scores with a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1\.444Standardizing is the same as computing the z\-score\.Then we compute the linguistic distancing \(L​DLD\) score per post \(tt\) as the average of the four standardized \(s​t​a​n​d​\(\)stand\(\)\) dimensions:

L​D​\(t\)=s​t​a​n​d​\(L​Dt​e​m​p​\(t\)\)\+s​t​a​n​d​\(L​Ds​o​c​i​a​l​\(t\)\)\+s​t​a​n​d​\(L​Da​b​s​\(t\)\)\+s​t​a​n​d​\(L​Dp​a​s​s​\(t\)\)4LD\(t\)=\\frac\{\\begin\{multlined\}stand\(LD\_\{temp\}\(t\)\)\+stand\(LD\_\{social\}\(t\)\)\\\\ \+stand\(LD\_\{abs\}\(t\)\)\+stand\(LD\_\{pass\}\(t\)\)\\end\{multlined\}stand\(LD\_\{temp\}\(t\)\)\+stand\(LD\_\{social\}\(t\)\)\\\\ \+stand\(LD\_\{abs\}\(t\)\)\+stand\(LD\_\{pass\}\(t\)\)\}\{4\}
Linguistic Distancing Per Age Group:The next step is to aggregate scores per age groups\. For our analyses we consider the following age groups: 13–19 \(teens\), 20–29 \(twenties\), 30–39 \(thirties\), 40–49 \(forties\), 50–59 \(fifties\), 60–69 \(sixties\), 70–79 \(seventies\)\. We group instances based on the age of the author at the time of writing\. Then we compute the linguistic distancing score per group as the average of all the scores of instances within the particular group\.

### 4\.2\. Statistical Analyses

To compare whether there is a statistically significant difference in linguistic distancing measures across age groups, we perform a one\-way ANOVA test\. Before performing inferential tests, we ensure that our data met ANOVA’s prerequisites\. Namely, we tested that the data are independent of each other, each independent variable is approximately normally distributed, and each group has roughly the same variance \(homoscedasticity\)\. Next, we use a qq\-plot of the residuals to verify that each score is normally distributed for each group\. In addition to the normality assumption, we can assume the estimate of the mean is normally distributed due to the large sample size \(law of large numbers\) according to the central limit theorem\. To verify whether each group has approximately the same variance, we performed Levene’s test and the result was significant \(p<0\.001p<0\.001\) for Reddit and TUSC\-City, meaning that the age groups do not have equal variance in the Reddit and TUSC\-City subsets of the dataset\. We can assume each data point is independent of others since each post is generally independent of one another\. While it is possible that while browsing social media, a post may influence others to some degree, this is largely not the case\. Therefore, we will perform a one\-way Welch’s ANOVA for TUSC\-City and Reddit\. Results for Levene’s tests can be found in Appendix[B](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#A2)\. After we determined our data met the assumptions, we performed the one\-way ANOVA\.

![Refer to caption](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957v1/images/linguistic_distancing_age_city_lineplot.png)
![Refer to caption](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957v1/images/linguistic_distancing_age_reddit_lineplot.png)

Figure 1:Linguistic Distancingscores for TUSC\-City, and Reddit subset of theAgeCorpus\(blue line\)\. Individual components of linguistic distancing across age groups are shown: temporal distance \(orange line\), social distance \(green line\), passive voice \(red line\) and abstractness \(purple line\)\. Error bars represent the standard error of the mean\.

## 5\. Results

### 5\.1\. RQ1: How Does Linguistic Distancing Vary Across Age Groups?

In Figure[1](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#S4.F1), we show the trend of linguistic distancing across age groups\. We see that regardless of the dataset \(i\.e\., X or Reddit\), linguistic distancing \(blue line\) occurs morefrequentlywith age\. This upwards trend is consistent across age groups \(except with a dip in the 30’s on Reddit\)\. This result is also reflected in the statistical analyses\. We show in Table[2](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#S3.T2)the F\-statistic and p\-value for the ANOVA tests\. For all datasets, there is a significant increase in linguistic distance with age \(Reddit:F​\(6,1203317\.10\)=17703\.63F\(6,1203317\.10\)=17703\.63,p<0\.001p<0\.001,η2=0\.003\\eta^\{2\}=0\.003; TUSC\-City:F​\(6,539267\.68\)=2830\.26F\(6,539267\.68\)=2830\.26,p<0\.001p<0\.001,η2=0\.009\\eta^\{2\}=0\.009\)\. The effect size on the X dataset is near 0\.01 which is considered small, and the effect size on the Reddit dataset is even smaller\.555Effect size of 0\.01 is small; 0\.06 is medium; and 0\.14 is large\. Effect sizes help us quantify whether differences are practically meaningful in the real\-world\.

Discussion:Past literature has found that overall well\-being, lower negative affect, higher positive affect and improved emotion regulation skills is associated with ageUrry and Gross \([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib7)\); Charleset al\.\([2023](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib42)\); Stoneet al\.\([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib43)\); Isaacowitz \([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib44)\)\. Our findings show that with age, there are proportionally more instances of distancing\. Given the relationship between linguistic distancing and emotion regulation, our findings support more use of reappraisal with age and in turn better well\-being in the older ages\. The drop in the 30’s Reddit data is interesting as past work has found a dip in well\-being during midlife \(e\.g\., 35’s–50’s\)Blanchflower and Oswald \([2008](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib46)\); Blanchflower and Graham \([2021](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib45)\); Stoneet al\.\([2010](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib43)\), however, there are some theories opposing the U\-shape of happinessGalamboset al\.\([2020](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib47)\)\.

### 5\.2\. RQ2: How does Social Distancing, Temporal Distancing, Abstractness, and Passive Voice Change with Age?

In Figure[1](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#S4.F1), we see the trend for each of the dimensions of linguistic distancing across age groups\. Every dimension \(i\.e\.,temporaldistance,socialdistance,abstractness,passive\) occurs more frequently with age, although some have a steeper slope\.Socialdistancing has the steepest slope across datasets based on the graph\. This means that the rate at whichsocialdistancing increases with age is higher than the rate for other dimensions\. In addition,socialdistancing also starts off at a lower point on the y\-axis than all the other dimensions, allowing more room to grow with age\. However, on Redditabstractness,temporal, andpassivescores plateau/decrease after age 40 and onwards, and likewise withtemporaldistancing on X\. This could be due to the nature of the platforms and the topics discussed on each e\.g\., often people describe situations on Reddit to obtain advice and therefore talk in a more present\-tense, less abstract manner\. Reddit also has a dip in linguistic distancing in the 30’s which is primarily driven by a decrease in temporal distance\. This means that individuals are using more present tense verbs\.

Discussion:While some of these dimensions have not been studied directly with age, they measure concepts that have been shown to change with age\. For example, moresocialdistancing is associated with fewer personal\-pronouns used\. Various literature point to the negative relationship between age and first\-person singular pronounsSchwartzet al\.\([2013](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib50)\); Pang,Dandanet al\.\([2025](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib51)\); Pennebaker and Stone \([2003](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib52)\)\. The trends we see across X and Reddit support this pattern\. In terms oftemporaldistancing, higher levels mean that fewer present tense verbs are used which is also supported by past work which points to more future\-tense and fewer past\-tense verbs with agePennebaker and Stone \([2003](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib52)\)\. While there are few works studyingpassive voicewith age, older adults were found to produce fewer passive sentences than younger adults in KoreanSunget al\.\([2024](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib53)\)\. Also, older adults \(i\.e\., 70’s\) had more difficulty producing and understanding abstractness on testsAlbertet al\.\([1990](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib54)\)\. For abstractness, no statistical difference was found for the ability to define abstract words across participants aged 19–89, but the use of abstract vs\. concrete words in everyday language was not examinedPezzutiet al\.\([2021](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib58)\)\. While some work examines how each of these components vary across childhood or in terms of acquisition \(e\.g\., linguistic distancing:Nooket al\.\([2020](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib27)\); Cohenet al\.\([2022](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib18)\); passive voice:Baldie \([1976](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib48)\); Horgan \([1978](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib49)\)\), fewer work examines how they change across adulthood\. Further, past work examining linguistic distancing does not consider the contributions oftemporalvs\.socialdistancing to linguistic distancing across age groupsNooket al\.\([2017](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#biba.bib1)\)\. Therefore, we provide new findings that lay the foundation for future exploration into what drives changes in linguistic distancing with age\.

## 6\. Conclusion

We study how linguistic distancing changes across adulthood to better understand emotion regulation with age\. We use large social media datasets to systematically analyze how does linguistic distancing vary across teens to 70’s on X and Reddit\. We construct an interpretable measure of linguistic distancing based on four dimensions:temporaldistancing,socialdistancing,passivevoice andabstractness\. We found that linguistic distancing occurs in proportionally more posts with age\. When exploring how each of the dimensions changed across age groups, we found thatsocialdistancing has the highest rate of increase\. We also saw thattemporaldistancing plateaus and decreases in later ages\. Our work provides an initial foundation for understanding how linguistic distancing varies in text across age groups and supports further exploration into measuring linguistic distancing on social media\. Future work could examine how such measures change across platforms discussing diverse topics \(e\.g\., subreddits\) and contrast results with LLM measures of linguistic distancing\. Future work could also explore linguistic distancing in different languages and cultures, as psychological distancing and distancing in language may differ based on culture or contexts\.

## Ethical Considerations

Our research interest is to study how linguistic distancing changes across adulthood at the aggregate/group level\. This has applications in emotional development psychology and in public health \(e\.g\., overall well\-being and mental health\)\. However, personal well\-being is complex, private, and central to an individual’s experience\. Additionally, each individual expresses themselves differently through language, which results in large amounts of variation\.

Our work on studying linguistic distancing should not be construed as detecting how people feel; rather, we draw inferences on the language used\.

The inferences we draw in this paper are based on aggregate trends across large populations\. We do not draw conclusions about specific individuals or momentary states of well\-being\.

## Limitations

The dataset used in this study relies on self\-disclosure of age on social media\. As with all scenarios involving self\-disclosure, individuals may falsely report their age due to social pressures, or in order to relate to and engage with certain communities\. Additionally, the templates used for pattern matching with age may not fully capture all possible ways to express age, so there may be age declarations not included in the dataset\.

## Acknowledgments

This research was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada \(NSERC\), the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council \(SSHRC\), the Digital Research Alliance of Canada \(alliancecan\.ca\), and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research \(CIFAR\)\. Compute resources were graciously supplied by Prairies DRI and the Digital Research Alliance of Canada\. Alona Fyshe holds a Canada CIFAR AI Chair\.

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## Appendix APatterns to Match Age Declarations

In Table[3](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#A1.T3), we show the pattern templates used to match age declarations in seed posts in theAgeCorpus\.

RegexExample\\bI\(?:\\s\+am\|’m\)\\s\+\(\\d\{1,2\}\)\\s\+years?\\s\+old\\bI am 25 years oldI’m 30 year old\\bI\(?:\\s\+am\|’m\)\\s\+\(\\d\{1,2\}\)\(?=\\s\*\(?:$\|\[,\.\!?;:\\\-\]\|\(?:and\|but\|so\|yet\)\\s\)\)I am 25\.I’m 30, and …\\bI\(?:\\s\+was\|\\s\+am\|’m\)\\s\+born\\s\+in\\s\+\(19\\d\{2\}\|20\(?:0\\d\|1\\d\|2\[0\-4\]\)\)\\bI was born in 1998I am born in 2005\\bI\(?:\\s\+was\|\\s\+am\|’m\)\\s\+born\\s\+in\\s\+’\(\\d\{2\}\)\\bI was born in ’98I’m born in ’05\\bI\\s\+was\\s\+born\\s\+on\\s\+\(?:\\d\{1,2\}\(?:st\|nd\|rd\|th\)?\\s\+\)?\(?:January\|February\|March\|April\|May\|June\|July\|August\|September\|October\|November\|December\|Jan\|Feb\|Mar\|Apr\|May\|Jun\|Jul\|Aug\|Sep\|Sept\|Oct\|Nov\|Dec\)\\s\+\(?:\\d\{1,2\}\(?:st\|nd\|rd\|th\)?,?\\s\+\)?\(19\\d\{2\}\|20\(?:0\\d\|1\\d\|2\[0\-4\]\)\)\\bI was born on 15 March 1998I was born on March 15th, 1998\\bI\\s\+was\\s\+born\\s\+on\\s\+\\d\{1,2\}\[/\\\-\]\\d\{1,2\}\[/\\\-\]\(19\\d\{2\}\|20\(?:0\\d\|1\\d\|2\[0\-4\]\)\)\\bI was born on 03/15/1998I was born on 15\-03\-1998Table 3:Regexes used to identify users from both the Reddit and X datasets\.
## Appendix BLevene’s Test of Homogeneity of Variance

Levene’s test indicated that the assumption for homogeneity of variance was not violated for the effect of age group on linguistic distancing for TUSC\-Country, but was violated for Reddit and TUSC\-City subsets of theAgeCorpus\. We show the results in Table[4](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#A2.T4)\.

DatasetMetricdf1df2F\-statisticP\-valueRedditLinguistic63296482210269\.65p<<\.001TUSC\-CityLinguistic6191831086\.13p<<\.001TUSC\-CountryLinguistic611,9401\.12p==\.348Table 4:The degrees of freedom, F\-statistic, and p\-value in Levene’s test of Homogeneity of Variances for linguistic distancing and each dimension of linguistic distancing across the subsets of theAgeCorpus\.Age Group\#PostsCountryCityReddit13–1955194,8579,281,05520–293,076406,02715,455,42630–393,001462,2386,151,75740–491,808360,9461,220,49850–591,541278,809449,23060–691,551218,008246,39870–7941997,432160,465Table 5:The number of posts across the age groups in each subset of theAgeCorpus\. “Country” refers to TUSC\-Country and “City” refers to TUSC\-City subsets of the dataset\. We use this data in our experiments\.
## Appendix CTUSC\-Country Results

In the following Sections we show the number of posts in the TUSC\-Country version of the dataset and the linguistic distancing results on this subset of theAgeCorpus\.

### C\.1\.AgeCorpus: TUSC\-Country

In Table[5](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#A2.T5), we show the number of posts in TUSC\-Country, TUSC\-City and Reddit subsections of theAgeCorpusfor comparison\.

### C\.2\. Linguistic Distancing Results

In Table[6](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#A3.T6), we show the results from the ANOVA tests for the difference in linguistic distancing across age groups\. We include the rows for the Reddit and TUSC\-City subsets of theAgeCorpusdataset as a comparison\.

In Figure[2](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957#A3.F2), we show the trends of linguistic distancing across age groups \(blue line\), as well as the trends fortemporaldistancing,socialdistancing,passive voiceandabstractness\. Largely the trends for TUSC\-Country follow those of TUSC\-City, with an increasing proportion of distancing occurring with age\. Generally, all dimensions of distancing grow similarly across age groups, with social distancing having the steepest slope\.

DatasetMetricdf1df2F\-statisticP\-valueEffect Size \(estω\\omega2\)RedditLinguistic61203317\.1017703\.63p<<\.0010\.003TUSC\-CountryLinguistic61194029\.66p<<\.0010\.015TUSC\-CityLinguistic6539267\.682830\.26p<<\.0010\.009Table 6:The degrees of freedom \(for the numerator and denominator\), F\-statistic, p\-value, and effect size in the one\-way ANOVA test for differences in linguistic distancing between age groups\. Welch’s ANOVA was performed for Reddit and TUSC\-City\.![Refer to caption](https://arxiv.org/html/2606.30957v1/images/linguistic_distancing_age_country_lineplot.png)Figure 2:Linguistic Distancingscores for TUSC\-Country subset of theAgeCorpus\(blue line\)\. Individual components of linguistic distancing across age groups are shown: temporal distance \(orange line\), social distance \(green line\), passive voice \(red line\) and abstractness \(purple line\)\. Error bars represent the standard error of the mean\.

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