Science of Subjective Well-Being
AvMichael Eid,Randy J. Larsen,Germany) Eid, Michael (Free University of Berlin,United States) Larsen, Randy J. (Washington University in St. Louis,Randy J Larsen
1 449 kr
Tillfälligt slut
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2008-01-03
- Mått156 x 234 x 34 mm
- Vikt924 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor546
- FörlagGuilford Publications
- ISBN9781593855819
Tillhör följande kategorier
Michael Eid, DSc, is Professor of Psychology at the Free University of Berlin, Germany. Dr. Eid is currently Editor of Methodology--European Journal of Research Methods for the Behavioral and Social Sciences and Associate Editor of the Journal of Positive Psychology. His main research interests are subjective well-being, mood regulation, multimethod measurement, and longitudinal data analysis.Randy J. Larsen, PhD, is the William R. Stuckenberg Professor of Human Values and Moral Development and Chair of the Psychology Department at Washington University in St. Louis. He conducts research on emotion, primarily in terms of differences between people, and studies such topics as subjective well-being, mood variability, jealousy, attraction, depression, and strategies for the self-management of self-esteem and emotion. Dr. Larsen is an elected member of the Society of Multivariate Experimental Psychology and is listed as one of the highly cited psychologists by the Institute for Scientific Information.
- 1. Ed Diener and the Science of Subjective Well-Being, Michael Eid and Randy J. LarsenI. The Realm of Subjective Well-being 2. Philosophy and the Science of Subjective Well-Being, Daniel M. Haybron3. Sociological Theories of Subjective Well-Being, Ruut Veenhoven4. Evolution and Subjective Well-Being, Sarah E. Hill and David M. Buss5. The Pursuit of Happiness in History, Darrin M. McMahonII. Measuring Subjective Well-being 6. The Structure of Subjective Well-Being, Ulrich Schimmack7. The Assessment of Subjective Well-Being: Successes and Shortfalls, William Pavot8. Measuring the Immeasurable: Psychometric Modeling of Subjective Well-Being Data, Michael EidIII. The Happy Person 9. Personality and Subjective Well-Being, Richard E. Lucas10. Happiness and the Invisible Threads of Social Connection: The Chicago Health, Aging, and Social Relations Study, John T. Cacioppo, Louise C. Hawkley, Ariel Kalil, M. E. Hughes, Linda Waite, and Ronald A. Thisted11. The Happy Mind in Action: The Cognitive Basis of Subjective Well-Being, Michael D. Robinson and Rebecca J. Compton12. The Frequency of Social Comparison and Its Relation to Subjective Well-Being, Frank Fujita13. Regulation of Emotional Well-Being: Overcoming the Hedonic Treadmill, Randy J. Larsen and Zvjezdana Prizmic14. Two New Questions about Happiness: Is Happiness Good? and Is Happier Better?, Shigehiro Oishi and Minkyung Koo15. Material Wealth and Subjective Well-Being, Robert Biswas-Diener16. Religion and Human Flourishing, David G. MyersIV. Subjective Well-Being in the Interpersonal Domain17. What Makes People Happy?: A Developmental Approach to the Literature on Family Relationships and Well-Being, Marissa L. Diener and Mary Beth Diener McGavran18. Research on Life Satisfaction of Children and Youth: Implications for the Delivery of School-Related Services, E. Scott Huebner and Carol Diener19. Job Satisfaction: Subjective Well-Being at Work, Timothy A. Judge and Ryan Klinger20. Comparing Subjective Well-Being across Cultures and Nations: The What and Why Questions, Eunkook M. Suh and Jayoung KooV. Making People Happier 21. Interventions for Enhancing Subjective Well-Being: Can We Make People Happier, and Should We?, Laura A. King22. Promoting Positive Affect, Barbara L. Fredrickson23. Gratitude, Subjective Well-Being, and the Brain, Robert A. EmmonsVI. Conclusions and Future Directions25. Myths in the Science of Happiness, and Directions for Future Research, Ed Diener
What makes us happy? One might think this a very simple question, but the contributors to this volume suggest that many of our intuitions are not well supported by science. Instead, subjective well-being in individuals and societies is only partially about accumulating hedonic pleasures and stores of wealth, and even these relationships are not what one might predict. Eid and Larsen have gathered together brilliant thinkers and lively writers who trace from ancient philosophy to contemporary behavioral economics what it is that makes us feel good about our lives.--Peter Salovey, PhD, Dean of Yale College and Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology, Yale UniversityResearch into subjective well-being has a sustained and honored lineage within psychology, in large part due to the work of Ed Diener and his associates. This book describes what researchers in this area have learned and where we might be headed in the future. It deserves a prominent place on every psychologist's bookshelf. The book is a valuable resource--thorough, intelligent, and provocative--and an action plan for a topic of great individual and societal importance.--Christopher Peterson, PhD, Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of Psychology, University of MichiganThis terrific book captured my attention for hours of nonstop, riveting reading. The contributors are all first-rate, consisting of both eminent social scientists in the field of well-being and innovative young scholars. With a combination of breadth and depth, the book provides comprehensive treatment of cutting-edge theory and research. Chapters cover a broad array of topics, as varied as evolutionary and developmental psychology, behavioral genetics, measurement, happiness interventions, history, and philosophy. This book is indispensable for anyone interested in positive psychology, and is an ideal resource for graduate-level and advanced undergraduate classes.--Sonja Lyubomirsky, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of California, Riverside- Editors Michael Eid and Randy J. Larsen bring together all in one place most of the heavy hitters in the field...This volume is the type of book that dissertation mentors will nudge their advisees to read, that professors will adopt as the foundation for graduate or upper-level college seminars on subjective well-being and related topics, and that faculty will want to peruse to see the creative and innovative ways in which this rich field has evolved. --PsycCRITIQUES, 10/11/2008
Du kanske också är intresserad av
Mobile Sensing in Psychology
Matthias R. Mehl, Michael Eid, Cornelia Wrzus, Gabriella M Harari, Ulrich W Ebner-Priemer, United States) Mehl, Matthias R. (University of Arizona, Germany) Eid, Michael (Free University of Berlin, Germany) Wrzus, Cornelia (Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg, United States) Harari, Gabriella M (Stanford University, Germany) Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Matthias R Mehl
2 079 kr
Structural Equation Modeling of Multiple Rater Data
Michael Eid, Christian Geiser, Tobias Koch, Germany) Eid, Michael (Free University of Berlin, United States) Geiser, Christian (Utah State University
1 099 kr
Personality Psychology: Domains of Knowledge About Human Nature ISE
Randy Larsen, David Buss, Randy J. Larsen, David M. Buss
739 kr
Formelsammlung Statistik und Forschungsmethoden
Michael Eid, Mario Gollwitzer, Manfred Schmitt
389 kr
- Nyhet