To extract clothing life-support information for elderly men and women, we investigated clothing life, including sleepwear, for six viewpoints based on various lifestyles, using a five-grade evaluation. The survey subjects totaled 160 men and women age 60 or older (80 men and 80 women, average age, 74.18 years).
For the average differences of “the serious consideration of quality of life, dietary life, clothing life, and the fullness level of life” between the sexes, the women’s lifestyles scored higher than those of the men. However, on the topics of sleep and sleepwear for functionality and comfort there were hardly any differences between men and women.
Six factors (72.285% of the accumulated contribution ratios) were proved using factor analysis. Based on cluster analysis using the five factor scores, the four clothing life types indicated by commonalities and differences in consciousness between the elderly men and women were extracted as clothing life-support information. The two main groups of women displayed different types of the high and low evaluation for the fullness levels of various aspects of life, including sleep and sleepwear. The two main groups of men represented the commonalities, in terms of views on the main functions of sleepwear, and different in their attitudes toward various lifestyles, including sleep habits.
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