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      Unemployment Alters the Set Point for Life Satisfaction

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      Psychological Science
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Lottery winners and accident victims: is happiness relative?

          Adaptation level theory suggests that both contrast and habituation will operate to prevent the winning of a fortune from elevating happiness as much as might be expected. Contrast with the peak experience of winning should lessen the impact of ordinary pleasures, while habituation should eventually reduce the value of new pleasures made possible by winning. Study 1 compared a sample of 22 major lottery winners with 22 controls and also with a group of 29 paralyzed accident victims who had been interviewed previously. As predicted, lottery winners were not happier than controls and took significantly less pleasure from a series of mundane events. Study 2 indicated that these effects were not due to preexisting differences between people who buy or do not buy lottery tickets or between interviews that made or did not make the lottery salient. Paraplegics also demonstrated a contrast effect, not by enhancing minor pleasures but by idealizing their past, which did not help their present happiness.
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            Reexamining adaptation and the set point model of happiness: reactions to changes in marital status.

            According to adaptation theory, individuals react to events but quickly adapt back to baseline levels of subjective well-being. To test this idea, the authors used data from a 15-year longitudinal study of over 24.000 individuals to examine the effects of marital transitions on life satisfaction. On average, individuals reacted to events and then adapted back toward baseline levels. However, there were substantial individual differences in this tendency. Individuals who initially reacted strongly were still far from baseline years later, and many people exhibited trajectories that were in the opposite direction to that predicted by adaptation theory. Thus, marital transitions can be associated with long-lasting changes in satisfaction, but these changes can be overlooked when only average trends are examined.
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              Scarring: The Psychological Impact of Past Unemployment

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Psychological Science
                Psychol Sci
                Wiley-Blackwell
                0956-7976
                1467-9280
                May 06 2016
                May 06 2016
                : 15
                : 1
                : 8-13
                Article
                10.1111/j.0963-7214.2004.01501002.x
                14717825
                bbbaa53f-a5ff-4773-9af7-a3d81da78267
                © 2016
                History

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