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Nansook Park

Researcher at University of Rhode Island

Publications -  53
Citations -  15012

Nansook Park is an academic researcher from University of Rhode Island. The author has contributed to research in topics: Life satisfaction & Values in Action Inventory of Strengths. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 53 publications receiving 13586 citations. Previous affiliations of Nansook Park include University of Michigan.

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Positive Psychology Progress: Empirical Validation of Interventions.

TL;DR: In a 6-group, random-assignment, placebo-controlled Internet study, the authors found that 3 of the interventions lastingly increased happiness and decreased depressive symptoms.
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Strengths of character and well-being

TL;DR: This paper investigated the relationship between various character strengths and life satisfaction among 5,299 adults from three Internet samples using the Values in Action Inventory of Strengths (VINSS) and found that strong character strengths associated with life satisfaction were hope, zest, gratitude, love, and curiosity.
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Orientations to happiness and life satisfaction: The full life versus the empty life.

TL;DR: This paper measured life satisfaction and the endorsement of three different ways to be happy through pleasure, through engagement, and through meaning, and found that people simultaneously low on all three orientations reported especially low life satisfaction.
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The Role of Subjective Well-Being in Positive Youth Development

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that high life satisfaction is related to good adaptation and optimal mental health among youth and that positive affect mitigate the negative effects of stressful life events and work against the development of psychological and behavioral problems among youth.
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Strengths of character, orientations to happiness, and life satisfaction

TL;DR: The authors found that the character strengths most associated with life satisfaction were associated with orientations to pleasure, to engagement, and to meaning, implying that the most fulfilling character strengths are those that make possible a full life.