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Forbes

AgeLab Director Joseph Coughlin writes for Forbes about the similarities and differences between retirement and summer vacation for kids. “Retirement positively dwarfs summer vacation in the amount of time involved—yet many peoples’ plans for retirement look a lot like plans for a summer vacation,” writes Coughlin.

Forbes

Writing for Forbes, Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, explores how services such as meal kits and delivery apps appeal to younger and older consumers. “Innovations developed to respond to the demands of what, on the surface, appears to be distinctly younger lifestyles may, in fact, be both a market opportunity for business and an emerging critical resource to support older consumers,” writes Coughlin.

The New Yorker

New Yorker reporter Adam Gopnick visits the MIT AgeLab to explore how researchers are developing new technologies aimed at improving the quality of life for people as they age. “Now that we’re living longer, how do we plan for what we’re going to do?” says AgeLab Director Joseph Coughlin of the lab’s mission.

The Economist

While examining the impact of aging societies on growth, The Economist cites a new study co-authored by Prof. Daron Acemoglu, which shows that “when young workers are sufficiently scarce, manufacturers invest in more automation, and experience faster productivity growth as a result.”

Forbes

In an article for Forbes, Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, provides tips for adult children planning to have difficult conversations with their parents about such topics as driving and housing. “Hanging up the keys or leaving the family home often places two sets of critical values at odds – freedom versus safety,” writes Coughlin.

Forbes

Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, writes for Forbes about how people planning for retirement must factor in the cost of transportation as they age. “Transportation is often taken for granted but it is critical to living well at any age,” Coughlin notes.

Forbes

Writing for Forbes, AgeLab Director Joseph Coughlin examines the importance of retirement planning, based off of a recent conversation he had with a Lyft driver. “Today’s retirement planning story must also add several chapters of imaginative, yet realistic, planning that go well beyond financial security and goal-setting alone,” writes Coughlin.

Forbes

Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, writes for Forbes examines how new technologies could help people follow-through their New Year’s resolutions. Coughlin writes that marketing innovations that leverage “behavioral science insights are emerging to help with sustained behavioral change.”

WCVB

Prof. Brad Skow speaks with WCVB-TV’s Chronicle about the concept of time and the “block universe” theory of time, which states that time does not pass by but is instead part of the larger fabric of the universe. “The future is a place just like Australia,” says Skow. “Australia is far away spatially and the future is also far away temporally.”

Inc.

Inc. has named Boston to its list of the 50 best places in America for starting a business thanks to the MIT AgeLab’s work developing a “Silicon Valley for the octogenarian set.” Inc. notes that the AgeLab has helped spawn “a cluster of age-tech startups launching products like wireless headphones (Eversound) and virtual reality headsets (Rendever) that are optimized for seniors.”

Quartz

Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, writes for Quartz about ways that new technologies can be used to make aging more fun for today’s seniors. “By investing in such uncharted aspects of the longevity economy now, we may pave the way for ourselves to live longer, better—and perhaps with a smile,” writes Coughlin.

Barron's

Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, writes for Barron’s about how senior citizens are becoming an increasingly dominant consumer market. “Older consumers will no longer put up with companies that address only basic physiological or safety needs,” writes Coughlin. “New demands in the older market are arising from higher-level drives, such as goals, aspirations, aesthetic preferences, social needs, and talents.”

The Wall Street Journal

Writing for The Wall Street Journal, Dr. Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, writes that smart technologies and on-demand services could allow seniors to stay in their own homes. Coughlin notes that the freedom the connected home provides for choosing services, “is an enormous benefit not only for older adults’ wallets, but for their own sense of independence and personal control.”

Forbes

An MIT AgeLab survey finds that many Americans have unrealistic expectations for retirement, writes Richard Eisenberg for Forbes. Research scientist Chaiwoo Lee suggests that financial advisers use the survey results to “create messages and images and materials for potential clients and provide clients with a better education about life after career.”

The Wall Street Journal

In an article for The Wall Street Journal, Joseph Coughlin, director of the AgeLab, and research associate Lucas Yoquinto write that companies are increasingly designing aesthetically-pleasing and user-friendly technology for the elderly. “As the focus on older consumers’ preferences goes beyond the development of better products to the creation of new product categories, the experience of later life may improve substantially,” they explain.