Publication | Closed Access
Life Satisfaction Set Point: Stability and Change.
807
Citations
18
References
2005
Year
Quality Of LifeLife SatisfactionPsychiatrySubjective Well-beingEmotional Well-beingLongevityBody Mass IndexMedicineHuman WellbeingSocial SciencesHappinessPsychological Well-beingRepresentative Panel StudyPsychology
Using data from 17 years of a large and nationally representative panel study from Germany, the authors examined whether there is a set point for life satisfaction (LS)--stability across time, even though it can be perturbed for short periods by life events. The authors found that 24% of respondents changed significantly in LS from the first 5 years to the last 5 years and that stability declined as the period between measurements increased. Average LS in the first 5 years correlated .51 with the 5-year average of LS during the last 5 years. Height, weight, body mass index, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and personality traits were all more stable than LS, whereas income was about as stable as LS. Almost 9% of the sample changed an average of 3 or more points on a 10-point scale from the first 5 to last 5 years of the study.
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