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Can seeking happiness make people unhappy? Paradoxical effects of valuing happiness.

TLDR
It is argued that valuing happiness may not always be the case, and that the more people value happiness, the more likely they will feel disappointed, which may lead people to be less happy just when happiness is within reach.
Abstract
Happiness is a key ingredient of well-being. It is thus reasonable to expect that valuing happiness will have beneficial outcomes. We argue that this may not always be the case. Instead, valuing happiness could be self-defeating, because the more people value happiness, the more likely they will feel disappointed. This should apply particularly in positive situations, in which people have every reason to be happy. Two studies support this hypothesis. In Study 1, female participants who valued happiness more (vs. less) reported lower happiness when under conditions of low, but not high, life stress. In Study 2, compared to a control group, female participants who were experimentally induced to value happiness reacted less positively to a happy, but not a sad, emotion induction. This effect was mediated by participants’ disappointment at their own feelings. Paradoxically, therefore, valuing happiness may lead people to be less happy just when happiness is within reach.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Future of Emotion Regulation Research: Capturing Context.

TL;DR: The author proposes an approach to systematically evaluate the contextual factors shaping emotion regulation by specifying the components that characterize emotion regulation and then systematically evaluating deviations within each of these components and their underlying dimensions.
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Some key differences between a happy life and a meaningful life

TL;DR: In this article, a large survey revealed multiple differing predictors of happiness (controlling for meaning) and meaningfulness, including worry, stress, and anxiety, which were linked to higher meaningfulness but lower happiness.
Posted Content

Some Key Differences between a Happy Life and a Meaningful Life

TL;DR: In this article, a large survey revealed multiple differing predictors of happiness (controlling for meaning) and meaningfulness, and concluded that satisfying one's needs and wants increased happiness but was largely irrelevant to meaningfulness.
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Emotion Regulation Flexibility

TL;DR: This article proposed a translational framework for the study of emotion regulation in normative and clinical populations, which is relevant to both basic research, experimental psychopathology, and clinical practice, and specify how such tools can be used in a variety of settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Personality, Well-Being, and Health*

TL;DR: A substantial body of recent research reveals that conscientiousness plays a very significant role in health, with implications across the lifespan, and more caution is warranted before policy makers offer narrow health recommendations based on short-term or correlational findings.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The structure of psychological well-being revisited

TL;DR: A theoretical model of psychological well-being that encompasses 6 distinct dimensions of wellness (Autonomy, Environmental Mastery, Personal Growth, Positive Relations with Others, Purpose in Life, Self-Acceptance) was tested with data from a nationally representative sample of adults (N = 1,108), aged 25 and older, who participated in telephone interviews.
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A meta-analytic review of experiments examining the effects of extrinsic rewards on intrinsic motivation.

TL;DR: In this paper, a meta-analysis of 128 studies examined the effects of extrinsic rewards on intrinsic motivation and found that engagement-contingent, completion-contengent, and performance-contagioning rewards significantly undermined free-choice intrinsic motivation, as did all rewards, all tangible rewards and all expected rewards.

Psychological Bulletin A Meta-Analytic Review of Experiments Examining the Effects of Extrinsic Rewards on Intrinsic Motivation

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of 128 studies examined the effects of extrinsic rewards on intrinsic motivation, finding that Tangible rewards tended to be more detrimental for children than college students, and verbal rewards tend to be less enhancing for children compared with college students.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subjective well-being. The science of happiness and a proposal for a national index.

TL;DR: Representative selection of respondents, naturalistic experience sampling measures, and other methodological refinements are now used to study subjective well-being and could be used to produce national indicators of happiness.
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