Well-Being for Public Policy
- E. Diener, R. Lucas, U. Schimmack, J. Helliwell
- Economics
- 17 April 2009
Section I: Measuring well-being for public policy 1. Introduction 2. Defining well-being Section II: How well-being adds information 3. Limitations of economic and social indicators 4. Contributions…
Attentional interference effects of emotional pictures: threat, negativity, or arousal?
- U. Schimmack, D. Derryberry
- PsychologyEmotion
- 1 March 2005
Attentional interference arising from emotional pictures was examined, with the most arousing pictures (strong unpleasant pictures, oppositesex models) producing the strongest interference.
The ironic effect of significant results on the credibility of multiple-study articles.
- U. Schimmack
- PsychologyPsychological methods
- 27 August 2012
One major recommendation is to pay more attention to the power of studies to produce positive results without the help of questionable research practices and to request that authors justify sample sizes with a priori predictions of effect sizes.
Life-satisfaction is a momentary judgment and a stable personality characteristic: the use of chronically accessible and stable sources.
- U. Schimmack, E. Diener, S. Oishi
- PsychologyJournal of Personality
- 2002
The results are consistent with the theory that life-satisfaction judgments are based on chronically accessible sources and supported the hypothesis that personality effects were mediated by chronically accessible and stable sources.
Culture, personality, and subjective well-being: integrating process models of life satisfaction.
- U. Schimmack, P. Radhakrishnan, S. Oishi, V. Dzokoto, S. Ahadi
- PsychologyJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
- 1 April 2002
The results suggest that the influence of personality on the emotional component of SWB is pancultural, whereas the influence on the cognitive component ofSWB is moderated by culture.
Pleasure, displeasure, and mixed feelings: Are semantic opposites mutually exclusive?
- U. Schimmack
- Psychology
- 1 January 2001
Are pleasure and displeasure opposite markers of a single dimension, or are pleasure and displeasure two separate feelings? The present article argues that the existing evidence proved inconclusive…
The influence of chronically and temporarily accessible information on life satisfaction judgments.
- U. Schimmack, S. Oishi
- PsychologyJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
- 1 September 2005
The authors examined the influence of temporarily and chronically accessible information on life satisfaction judgments. Meta-analyses revealed high retest-reliability of life satisfaction judgments…
Personality and Life Satisfaction: A Facet-Level Analysis
- U. Schimmack, S. Oishi, R. Furr, D. Funder
- PsychologyPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin
- 1 August 2004
Analysis of the contribution of facets of Extraversion and Neuroticism to life satisfaction in four studies suggests that measures of depression and positive emotions/cheerfulness are necessary and sufficient to predict life satisfaction from personality traits.
The nature and structure of correlations among Big Five ratings: the halo-alpha-beta model.
- I. Anusic, U. Schimmack, R. Pinkus, P. Lockwood
- PsychologyJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
- 1 December 2009
The results suggest that the halo-alpha-beta model integrates the main findings in structural analyses of Big Five correlations and suggests that halo bias in self-ratings is a reliable and stable bias in individuals' perceptions of their own attributes.
Cultural influences on the relation between pleasant emotions and unpleasant emotions: Asian dialectic philosophies or individualism-collectivism?
- U. Schimmack, S. Oishi, E. Diener
- Psychology
- 1 November 2002
The present study examined the hypothesis that Asian cultures' dialectical way of thinking influences emotion reports. A dialectical way of thinking sees emotions of the opposite valence (e.g.,…
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