10.6084/m9.figshare.7845257.v1
Ji-eun Shin
Ji-eun
Shin
You are my happiness: Socially enriched happiness belief predicts life satisfaction, especially among the poor
Taylor & Francis Group
2019
Happiness belief
word association
life satisfaction
money
social relationship
2019-03-14 17:22:22
Journal contribution
https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/You_are_my_happiness_Socially_enriched_happiness_belief_predicts_life_satisfaction_especially_among_the_poor/7845257
<p>What three words come to your mind in response to “happiness”? Using a free-association task [cf. Nelson, D. L., McEvoy, C. L., & Dennis, S. (2000). What is free association and what does it measure? <i>Memory and Cognition</i>, <i>28</i>, 887–899], this research finds that the number of social words (e.g. family, love) provided in link to happiness predicts people’s actual life satisfaction level. However, this association was significantly moderated by the person’s self-perceived financial state. The contingency between holding a socially-oriented belief about happiness and experienced life satisfaction was significant among members of low socioeconomic status (SES), but not among the high SES group. This pattern was replicated across two divergent samples (Asian college students, Study 1; American adults, Study 2), regardless of one’s extraversion level (Studies 1, 2) and availability of social support (number of friends, Study 2). Given the overlapping function of money and social relationships (instrumental in promoting survival), believing in the social nature of happiness seems to be more central in the life satisfaction of those with less financial resource.</p>