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      The Efficacy of Positive Psychology Interventions to Increase Well-Being and the Role of Mental Imagery Ability

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      Social Indicators Research
      Springer Nature

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          Bad is stronger than good.

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            The grateful disposition: a conceptual and empirical topography.

            In four studies, the authors examined the correlates of the disposition toward gratitude. Study I revealed that self-ratings and observer ratings of the grateful disposition are associated with positive affect and well-being, prosocial behaviors and traits, and religiousness/spirituality. Study 2 replicated these findings in a large nonstudent sample. Study 3 yielded similar results to Studies I and 2 and provided evidence that gratitude is negatively associated with envy and materialistic attitudes. Study 4 yielded evidence that these associations persist after controlling for Extraversion/positive affectivity. Neuroticism/negative affectivity, and Agreeableness. The development of the Gratitude Questionnaire, a unidimensional measure with good psychometric properties, is also described.
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              Goal striving, need satisfaction, and longitudinal well-being: the self-concordance model.

              An integrative model of the conative process, which has important ramifications for psychological need satisfaction and hence for individuals' well-being, is presented. The self-concordance of goals (i.e., their consistency with the person's developing interests and core values) plays a dual role in the model. First, those pursuing self-concordant goals put more sustained effort into achieving those goals and thus are more likely to attain them. Second, those who attain self-concordant goals reap greater well-being benefits from their attainment. Attainment-to-well-being effects are mediated by need satisfaction, i.e., daily activity-based experiences of autonomy, competence, and relatedness that accumulate during the period of striving. The model is shown to provide a satisfactory fit to 3 longitudinal data sets and to be independent of the effects of self-efficacy, implementation intentions, avoidance framing, and life skills.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Social Indicators Research
                Soc Indic Res
                Springer Nature
                0303-8300
                1573-0921
                January 2013
                August 2011
                : 110
                : 1
                : 111-129
                Article
                10.1007/s11205-011-9919-1
                c5150cde-5575-4e80-894d-a1f2fece8957
                © 2013
                History

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