A
Ali Al Nima
Researcher at University of Gothenburg
Publications - 33
Citations - 652
Ali Al Nima is an academic researcher from University of Gothenburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Life satisfaction & Subjective well-being. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 33 publications receiving 487 citations.
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Anxiety, affect, self-esteem, and stress: mediation and moderation effects on depression.
TL;DR: Assessment of the mediating and moderating effects of anxiety, stress, positive affect, and negative affect on depression indicated that anxiety partially mediated the effects of both stress and self-esteem upon depression.
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The affective profiles, psychological well-being, and harmony: environmental mastery and self-acceptance predict the sense of a harmonious life
TL;DR: It is proposed that self-acceptance and environmental acceptance might enable individuals to go from self-destructive to a self-fulfilling state that also involves harmony in life.
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The affective profiles in the USA: happiness, depression, life satisfaction, and happiness-increasing strategies
Erica Schütz,Uta Sailer,Ali Al Nima,Patricia Rosenberg,Ann-Christine Andersson Arntén,Trevor Archer,Danilo Garcia +6 more
TL;DR: Differences between profiles regarding happiness, depression, and also life satisfaction suggest that promoting positive emotions can positively influence a depressive-to-happy state as well as increasing life satisfaction.
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A happier and less sinister past, a more hedonistic and less fatalistic present and a more structured future: time perspective and well-being.
Uta Sailer,Patricia Rosenberg,Ali Al Nima,Amelie Gamble,Tommy Gärling,Trevor Archer,Danilo Garcia +6 more
TL;DR: High levels of both subjective and psychological well-being are related to a happier and a less sinister past, a more hedonistic and less fatalistic present, as well as to a more structured future.
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Person-centered osteopathic practice: patients' personality (body, mind, and soul) and health (ill-being and well-being).
TL;DR: The patient’s personality as a ternary construct, which is in line with osteopathy, is associated to both well-being and ill-being, and osteopaths might be able to coach their patients to self-awareness.