The Personal Well-Being Index and the Work of the International WellBeing Group (IWBG) Presentation to Japanese General Social Surveys (JGSS) Group, Osaka School of Commerce 8-9 February 2013 Dr Dave Webb University of Western Australia dave.webb@uwa.edu.au 1 Acknowledgments •I would like to thank Professor Robert Cummins, Director of Australian Centre on Quality of Life (ACQOL) and members of the International Well-Being Group (IWBG) for use of some of the materials included in this presentation •I would like to especially thank Professor Noriko Iwai and staff of JGSS for inviting me to Osaka Acronyms seen today • • • • • • • • ACQOL = Australian Centre on Quality of Life COMQOL = Comprehensive measure of QOL IWBG = International wellbeing group QOL = Quality of Life SWB = Subjective wellbeing PWI = Personal wellbeing index NWI = National wellbeing index NEO-PI-R = Neuroticism, Extraversion and Openness to experience personal inventory (revised) 3 Introduction • Why measure SWB • Introduction to PWI – Development – Current application • Work of the IWBG • Examples of current personal work • Future research – Collaboration opportunities Subjective Well-Being A positive state of mind that involves the whole life experience Why should we measure it? How do we measure it? 5 Prof Cummins 2012 Why should we measure SWB? Happy citizens....(Lyubomirsky et al 2005) • • • • • • • • Positive perceptions of self and others Stronger creativity and problem solving Work harder Create more social capital Healthier Live longer Better social relationships More self-sufficient PWI Development - History Cummins 1995 • Many diverse instruments of SWB – Many definitions – 16 studies located adopting 14 diverse approaches – Converted mean of 75.02%, SD 2.74 Cummins 1996 • Meta-analysis resulted in 173 dimensions with much shared variance • Further analysis reduced to 7 broad domains (material well-being, health, productivity, intimacy, safety, community and emotional well-being) = 7 COMQOL 8 PWI Development • After several years COMQOL abandoned on grounds of: – Construct validity failure (item loadings) – Conceptual: (Importance) X (satisfaction) fails to explain variance beyond independent measures and, importance adds no explained variance beyond satisfaction – 5-point and 7-point limit discriminative capacity of respondents above point of neutrality • COMQOL > PWI/NWI and Relationship between Deakin University, Melbourne and Australian Unity 9 in 2001 “How satisfied are you with your --------?” Personal relationships How people feel about the domain Personal Health Standard of living How satisfied people feel in general Spirituality/ Religion 1. An over-all average [Subjective wellbeing] 2. A value for each domain that can be used diagnostically as well as potentially an input to policy development Life as a whole Achieving in life Community connectedness Safety Future security 10 Prof Cummins 2012 PWI = Eight questions of satisfaction with specific life domains. How satisfied are you with…? Domains 1. your standard of living? [Standard of Living] 2. your health? [Personal Health] 3. what you are achieving in life? [Achieving in Life] 4. your personal relationships? [Personal Relationships] 5. how safe you feel? [Personal Safety] 6. feeling part of your community? [Community-Connectedness] 7. your future security? [Future Security] 8. your spirituality or religion?¨ [Spirituality – Religion] PLUS one overall: How satisfied are you overall with your life? 11 [Jones and Thurstone 1955] 11-point, end-defined scale How satisfied are you with your ----? Completely Dissatisfied 0 1 Completely Satisfied 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 100 0 Score * 100/(number of scale points – 1) 12 Prof Cummins 2012 National Wellbeing Index (NWI) How satisfied are you with…? •Economic situation •Natural environment •Social conditions •Government •Business •National security 13 PWI & NWI Current situation • Since 2001/2002 adopted in over 40 countries • Translated in to more than 20 languages • Reported on in more than 120 journal articles • Dedicated section to PWI in Prof Alex Michalos Encyclopedia of QOL, Springer publishing (2013) 14 Coverage • • • • • • • • • Ireland Mexico Croatia Germany Australia Austria Spain Portugal Columbia • Argentina • China (Hong Kong, Macau, Tibet) • Thailand • New Zealand • USA • Canada • India • Algeria • Iran 15 Coverage areas • Measurement; development, application and validation • Conceptual & Theory-building (homeostasis, itemisation and face validity) • Economy (wealth, income, material, poverty, capitalism, social class, work and job type • Relationships (parental, spousal, love, attachment, belonging, loneliness) • Consumers and business interface • Religion and spirituality • Community living (aged and young-persons) • Community development • Health (illness, care-giving, mental and depression, stress, yogic lifestyle, substance abuse) • Affect and mood states • Crime and security • Internet usage • Ageing 16 Homeostasis and Set Point Theory 17 Australian Unity Studies • Since 2001 = 28 surveys on diverse themes of life in Australia e.g., work, family and relationships, threat of terrorism, climate change and natural disasters, personal health and finance, country living • Sample = approximately n= 2,000 per survey period across all regional states = rich within country picture (Total n = 52,000 approximately) 18 19 Prof Cummins 2012 Personal Wellbeing Index 2001 - 2011 77 76.7 >S11 76 75 >S2, S4, S5 Scores above this line are signif icantly higher than S1 Strength of satisfaction 74 73.7 Maximum = 76.3 Current = 75.9 Minimum = 73.2 73 Key: a = September 11 b = Bali Bombing c = Pre-Iraq War d = Hussein Depose e = Athens Olympics f = Asian Tsunami g = Second Bali Bombing h = New IR Laws i = Labor Government Elected j = Stock market collapse k = Fires and floods l = Stock market recovery n S25 Apr 2011 S24 Sept 2010 m S23 April 2010 S22 Sept 2009 l S21 May 2009 S20.1 Feb 2009 k S20 Oct 2008 S19 Apr 2008 j S18.1 Feb 2008 S18 Oct 2007 S17 Apr 2007 i S16 Oct 2006 h S15 May 2006 S14 Oct 2005 g S13 May 2005 f S12 Aug 2004 S10 Feb 2004 S11 May 2004 e S9 Nov 2003 d S8 Aug 2003 c S7 Jun 2003 S5 Nov 2002 S4 Aug 2002 b S3 Mar 2002 S2 Sept 2001 S1 Apr 2001 Survey Date a S6 Mar 2003 72 Major events preceding survey m = Labor government re-elected n = Qld/Vic floods 20 Prof Cummins 2012 Personal Wellbeing Index 2001 - 2011 77 76.7 >S11 76 75 >S2, S4, S5 Scores above this line are signif icantly higher than S1 Strength of satisfaction 74 73.7 This represents a 3.0 percentage point variation Maximum = 76.3 Current = 75.9 Minimum = 73.2 73 Key: a = September 11 b = Bali Bombing c = Pre-Iraq War d = Hussein Depose e = Athens Olympics f = Asian Tsunami g = Second Bali Bombing h = New IR Laws i = Labor Government Elected j = Stock market collapse k = Fires and floods l = Stock market recovery n S25 Apr 2011 S24 Sept 2010 m S23 April 2010 S22 Sept 2009 l S21 May 2009 S20.1 Feb 2009 k S20 Oct 2008 S19 Apr 2008 j S18.1 Feb 2008 S18 Oct 2007 S17 Apr 2007 i S16 Oct 2006 h S15 May 2006 S14 Oct 2005 g S13 May 2005 f S12 Aug 2004 S10 Feb 2004 S11 May 2004 e S9 Nov 2003 d S8 Aug 2003 c S7 Jun 2003 S5 Nov 2002 S4 Aug 2002 b S3 Mar 2002 S2 Sept 2001 S1 Apr 2001 Survey Date a S6 Mar 2003 72 Major events preceding survey m = Labor government re-elected n = Qld/Vic floods 21 Prof Cummins 2012 Normative range using survey mean scores as data (N=25 survey periods) Very satisfied 100 90 Subjective Wellbeing 80 76.4 70 73.4 60 50 Mean = 74.9 SD = 0.8 40 30 20 10 Very dissatisfied 0 22 Prof Cummins 2012 Why is SWB held so steady? Homeostasis Just like we hold body temperature steady • SWB Homeostasis is a management system that acts to keep people feeling normally positive about themself and so resists change 23 Prof Cummins 2012 Each person has a set-point for their SWB 90 These set-points lie between 60 and 90 Range for individual set-points 60 Set-points are always POSITIVE ie above 50 24 Prof Cummins 2012 Each person has a set-point for their SWB 90 The average set-point 75 60 When nothing much is happening to them, people rate how they feel about their life in terms of their set-point for SWB Time 25 Prof Cummins 2012 Homeostasis can fail Overwhelming negative challenges Subjective wellbeing The potential result of SWB loss is depression 26 Prof Cummins 2012 What determines whether we can defend ourselves against homeostatic defeat? Resilience • It is the power to defend wellbeing against sources of threat, such as poverty, ill-health and other negative life events • It is a balance between personal resources and the level of challenge 27 Prof Cummins 2012 SWB constantly under challenge, but is well protected Challenges X Subjective Wellbeing [normal] External resources (eg. Relationships, Money) 28 http://www.asianoffbeat.com/default.asp?display=1165 Prof Cummins 2012 Income is an external resource that enhances resilience 81 Total N ≈ 30,000 80 * 79 78.0 78 Subjective wellbeing 77 76 * 75 * 78.3 * 76.5 76.3 74.9 Normal Range 73.9 74 79.2 73.0 73 72 71.7 71 <$15 $15-30 $31-60 $61-90 $91-120 $121-150 $150+ Median Household Income ($'000) 29 Prof Cummins 2012 Internal resources Challenges X External resources (eg. relationships, money) Subjective wellbeing Internal resources (eg. Finding meaning, rationalising event) • God is testing me • It wasn’t my fault • I didn’t need that vase 30 Prof Cummins 2012 The use of internal resources http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Japanese_car_accident_blur.jpg When we fail to control the world around us (Primary Control failure) we engage Secondary Control to protect SWB “It wasn’t my fault” reasons (insert name here!) 31 Homeostasis failure Bad stuff X Internal resources (eg. blaming someone else) X Subjective wellbeing External resources (eg. relationships, money) The result of subjective wellbeing loss is depression 32 Prof Cummins 2012 Predictions for homeostasis theory 1. The relationship between the strength of challenge to homeostasis and SWB is nonlinear 2. The level of challenge to homeostasis is cumulative over sources of stress 3. Of themselves, ill-health and disability only weakly challenge homeostasis 4. Only the person concerned is qualified to report on their own subjective wellbeing. 33 Prof Cummins 2012 Homeostasis can be challenged by: Chronic pain (arthritis) Chronic stress (informal carers) Lack of intimacy Living conditions (homelessness) Incarceration Poverty Lack (prisoners) (and loss of wealth) of purpose in life 34 Prof Cummins 2012 So, what is the Relationship Between negative events (stressors) and SWB? High SWB ? Low Very Weak Very Strong Stressor 35 Prof Cummins 2012 The Relationship Between Stress and SWB Dominant source of control Homeostasis DISTRESS High 75 SWB Threshold Low No stress High stress Stress Level of environmental challenge 36 Prof Cummins 2012 Does the presence of a medical condition automatically mean low SWB? 37 Prof Cummins 2012 Subjective Wellbeing is generally insensitive to most medical conditions 80 78 76.3 SWB Normative range 75.7 76 73.9 76.4 73.7 74 72 73.3 71.0 70 68 66 64.8 64 62 61.0 60 Blood pressure Diabetes Heart problems Asthma Arthritis Depression Anxiety NB. The medical condition must be consciously experienced as strongly aversive in order to affect subjective wellbeing 38 Prof Cummins 2012 Body Mass Index (PWI) Underweight Normal Overweight 6.9% N=499 42.0% N=3044 35.6% N=2575 77 75.3 Obese 11.2% N=810 2.9% N=207 0.8% N=57 0.3 N=22 Mild Moderate Severe Very severe 76.1 76.6 75.5 75 Normal Range 73.9 73.4 73 SWB 72.7 71 71.4 69 67 66.0 65 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 BMI 35-39 40-44 45-49 39 Prof Cummins 2012 The level of challenge to homeostasis is cumulative over sources of stress 40 Prof Cummins 2012 Household structure Partner only Strength of satisfaction (PWI) 81 80 79 78 77 76 75 74 73 72 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 64 63 62 79.1 79.1 77.3 77.4 77.4 76.5 76.7 75.4 Normative Range 73.4 3.7 point change <$15 $15-$30 $31-$60 $61-$90 $91-$120 $121-$150 Household Income ($'000) $150+ 41 Prof Cummins 2012 Household structure Partner only Strength of satisfaction (PWI) 81 80 79 78 77 76 75 74 73 72 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 64 63 62 Partner & children 80.7 78.9 77.3 76.5 75.4 77.4 77.4 77.3 79.1 79.1 78.2 76.7 75.9 Normative Range 72.6 73.4 3.7 point change 70.3 10.4 point change <$15 $15-$30 $31-$60 $61-$90 $91-$120 $121-$150 Household Income ($'000) $150+ 42 Prof Cummins 2012 Household structure Partner only Strength of satisfaction (PWI) 81 80 79 78 77 76 75 74 73 72 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 64 63 62 Partner & children Sole parent 80.7 78.9 77.3 76.5 75.4 77.4 77.4 77.3 76.3 75.9 79.1 79.1 78.2 76.7 Normative Range 74.5 72.6 73.4 70.1 70.3 69.6 12.2 point change 64.1 <$15 $15-$30 $31-$60 $61-$90 $91-$120 $121-$150 Household Income ($'000) $150+ 43 Prof Cummins 2012 Partner only Strength of satisfaction (PWI) 81 80 79 78 77 76 75 74 73 72 71 70 69 68 67 66 65 64 63 62 Partner & children Sole parent 80.7 78.9 77.3 76.5 75.4 77.4 77.4 77.3 76.3 75.9 79.1 79.1 78.2 76.7 Normative Range 74.5 72.6 73.4 70.1 70.3 69.6 64.1 <$15 $15-$30 $31-$60 $61-$90 $91-$120 $121-$150 $150+ Household Income ($'000) Conclusion: Sources of challenge are additive 44 Prof Cummins 2012 The Personal Well-Being Index and the Work of the International WellBeing Group (IWBG) 45 The International wellbeing Index: A psychometric progress report Robert A. CUMMINS Deakin University, Australia Beatriz ARITA Universidad Autónoma de Sinaloa, Mexico Sergiu BALTATESCU University of Oradea, Romania Jozef DZUKA Presov University, SLOVAKIA Ferran CASAS University of Girona, Spain Anna LAU The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong Linda Luz GUERRERO Social Weather Stations,Philippines Gerard O'NEILL Amárach Consulting, Ireland Habib TILIOUINE University of Oran, Algeria Graciela TONON Universidad Nacional de Lomas de Zamora, Argentina Annapia VERRI Neurologic Institute C. Mondino and University of Pavia,Italy. Joar VITTERSO University of Tromso, Norway 46 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) This is an initiative of the IWBG AIM #1 To examine the relative psychometric performance of a standard SWB Index in different cultural and language groups. 47 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) AIM #2 To get beyond simplistic (and misleading) between-country comparisons of SWB To build understanding of WHY countries differ in their SWB 48 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Sample Demographics and Method Country N Males Females Age Range Mean Age Algeria 1,417 708 709 18 up 29 Argentina 476 160 316 18 up 82% < age group 48+ Australia 1897 931 966 18 up 49 Hong Kong 179 68 111 18 up 44 Italy 172 100 72 18-30 22 Ireland 994 491 503 15 up 37 Norway 427 184 243 18 up 48 Mexico 1170 556 614 18 up * Philippines 888 444 444 18 up 41 Romania 351 157 194 18 up 48 49 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Sample Demographics and Method Country Sample Demographics Method Response Rate Algeria Recruited around colleges, Universities and institutions Questionnaire and interview n/a Argentina Randomly selected from general population (approx. 30% small cities and rural areas) Interview public places n/a Australia Randomly selected from general population Telephone interview n/a Hong Kong Recruited to age quota Telephone interview n/a Italy College students Interview n/a Ireland Random/quota-controls Interview n/a Norway Randomly selected from general population Postal survey Mexico Randomly selected from electoral role zones in the Interview urban zone of Culiacan Philippine s Random/general population Interview 64% Romania Random/general population Interview 50 70% 35% n/a International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Two global constructs: Satisfaction with Life as a Whole Personal Wellbeing Index “How satisfied are you with -------” Satisfaction with Life in [country] National Wellbeing Index “How satisfied are you with -------” 1. your standard of living? 1. the economic situation in Algeria? 2. your health? 2. the state of the natural environment in Italy? 3. what you achieve in life? 4. your personal relationships? 5. how safe you feel? 6. feeling part of your community? 7. your future security? 3. the social conditions in Spain? 4. Government in Romania? 5. business in Australia? 6. national security in Argentina? 51 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Factor Analysis AUSTRALIA Government Business Social Environment Economic Nat. Security Achievements S2 Factor 1 S5 S6 .75 .75 .70 .69 .72 .63 .81 .77 .76 .73 .73 .61 .79 .77 .67 .69 .68 .70 Fut. Security Standard Relations Safety Community Health Eigen Values % variance explained Reliability 3.21 24.69 3.48 .82 4.53 - S2 Factor 2 S5 S6 .69 .70 .67 .68 .74 .67 .52 .60 .57 3.03 23.30 .69 .67 .60 .58 .57 .48 2.92 .78 .62 .67 .62 .50 .58 .56 1.60 52 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Factor Analysis 1. All countries tested produce two clean factors (using an item-loading cut-off score of .4 2. BUT, the factors emerge in different orders First Factor Second Factor Factor % of variance Factor % of variance PWI 37.5 NWI 15.6 PWI 42.0 NWI 14.1 PWI 41.8 NWI 14.7 NWI 43.9 PWI 15.1 NWI 35.8 PWI 12.7 NWI 32.5 PWI 17.3 NWI 39.9 PWI 14.9 NWI 42.0 PWI 14.1 53 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) What causes one factor to be stronger than the other? The strongest factor will be the one with the largest variance Factor 2 Factor 1 0 50 Satisfaction scale 100 54 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) SWB Homeostasis Our SWB is actively managed by a system that strives to maintain our level of happiness close to its genetically determined set-point. Set-points lie within the positive sector of the 0 – 100 range ie. between 60 - 90 55 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Proximal – Distal Dimension of homeostasis Control mechanism Homeostasis Cognition HI Strength of Homeostatic Control LO Proximal (about me) “My integrity” Distal (not at all about me) “The Government” “How satisfied are you with your -------” 56 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Why does the National Wellbeing Index normally emerge first as the strongest factor? National wellbeing normally has the largest variance Personal wellbeing: Factor 2 National wellbeing: Factor 1 0 50 Satisfaction scale 100 57 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) BUT This will only apply if homeostasis is effective. In situations of homeostatic defeat, the pattern will be reversed Personal wellbeing: Factor 1 National wellbeing: Factor 2 0 50 Satisfaction scale 100 58 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Prediction Variance NWI > PWI NWI : PWI Hostile PWI > NWI PWI : NWI Benign Environment Factor order Theory: The factor order can be diagnostic of a hostile environment 59 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Factor Analysis First Factor Second Factor Factor % of variance Factor % of variance PWI 37.5 NWI 15.6 PWI 42.0 NWI 14.1 PWI 41.8 NWI 14.7 NWI 43.9 PWI 15.1 NWI 35.8 PWI 12.7 NWI 32.5 PWI 17.3 NWI 39.9 PWI 14.9 NWI 42.0 PWI 14.1 60 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Factor Analysis First Factor Factor % of variance PWI Second Factor Index Factor % of variance SD 37.5 NWI 15.6 P>N PWI 42.0 NWI 14.1 P>N PWI 41.8 NWI 14.7 P>N NWI 43.9 PWI 15.1 N>P NWI 35.8 PWI 12.7 N>P NWI 32.5 PWI 17.3 N>P NWI 39.9 PWI 14.9 N>P NWI 42.0 PWI 14.1 N>P 61 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Factor Analysis First Factor Factor % of variance SD GDP/ CAP >$20K 37.5 NWI 15.6 P>N No PWI 42.0 NWI 14.1 P>N No PWI 41.8 NWI 14.7 P>N No NWI 43.9 PWI 15.1 N>P Yes NWI 35.8 PWI 12.7 N>P Yes NWI 32.5 PWI 17.3 N>P Yes NWI 39.9 PWI 14.9 N>P Yes NWI 42.0 PWI 14.1 N>P 62 No Factor % of variance PWI Second Factor Index Personal Wellbeing Index 80 77.4 75 73.0 72.8 71.1 71.0 69.6 70 Strength of satisfaction 65.6 65 60 55 52.3 50 Mexico Australia Ireland Spain Italy Romania Argentina Algeria 63 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Personal Wellbeing Index 80 GDP/CAP PWI 90 30.4 77.4 73.0 70 35 72.8 30 71.1 71.0 69.6 27.8 65.6 25 24.6 60 52.3 Strength of satisfaction 20.9 50 20 GDP/CAP $ (x 1,000) 15 40 30 20 7.4 10 8.1 8.8 5.6 5 10 0 0 Mexico Australia Ireland Spain Italy Romania Argentina Algeria 64 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Comparison SWB and Personality Steel, P. & Ones, D.S. (2002). Journal of Personality & Social Psychology, 83, 767-81. • Source of SWB: Veenhoven’s World Database of Happiness Mean sample size per country: •Affect (hedonic balance) = 2,901 •Happiness = 25,300 •Satisfaction = 28,654 •Number of people involved in the overall data = 2,100,000 65 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) NEO-PI-R (24 countries) 1. Neuroticism (anxious, moody etc) 2. Extraversion (sociable, optimistic etc.) 3. Openness to experience (intellect, appreciate arts etc.) 4. Conscientiousness (organised, industrious) 5. Agreeableness (altruistic, friendly etc.) 66 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Using population mean scores as data NEO-PI-R: Extraversion & Neuroticism • Predicting affect R² = .79 • Variance accounted for by extraversion • Predicting SWB (happiness and satisfaction) R² = .64 • Variance accounted for by neuroticism 67 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Hierarchical Regression Step 1: Step 2: GNP SWB R² = .76 R² = .41 Here, only neuroticism accounts for change in variance Personality explains MORE of the variance in between-nation SWB than does GNP !! 68 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Neuroticism vs. Personal Wellbeing Index 17 79.3 16.7 80 78 16 15.5 75.6 76 15 14.6 75.3 74 14.2 14 72 13.3 Neuroticism 13 71.0 70 69.4 PWI 68 12 66 65.1 11 64 10.3 10 62 60 9 Norway Romania Mexico Hong Kong Australia Italty 69 Country International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Extraversion vs. Personal Wellbeing Index 21 79.3 20.6 79 20 77 75.3 75.6 19.3 75 19 18.7 73 18.5 Extraversion PWI 18.4 71.0 18 71 69.4 69 17 16.7 67 65.1 16 65 Mexico Australia Norway Romania Italty Hong Kong 70 Country International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Conclusions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. These results are consistent with predictions based on Homeostasis Theory In trying to understand why countries differ in their level of SWB, the variance is at least as informative as the mean scores. Studies highlight the importance of personality in explaining SWB Highlight importance too in being clear about what wants to be measured in terms of SWB Footnote: A study of predictors of mental health & happiness in Japan found extraversion to be strongest predictor of happiness = 20% variance (Furnham and Cheng 1999) 71 International Well-Being Group (IWBG) Self-Determination Theory (SDT) • In SDT, the nutrients for healthy development and functioning include basic psychological (self) needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness. • When the needs are satisfied, people will develop and function effectively and experience wellbeing, but to the extent that they are thwarted, people more likely evidence ill-being and non-optimal functioning. – Deci, EL & Ryan, RM 2000, 'The "What" and "Why" of Goal Pursuits: Human Needs and the Self Determination of Behaviour', Psychological Inquiry, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 227-268. Current & Future projects • Sustainable consumption behaviours – Energy-saving – Waste management – Consumer attitude and CWB (charitable-giving and volunteerism) – Binge drinking among adolescents and well-being • Crime, security & Human rights – Human trafficking (Individual and community wellbeing) – Internet security and risk-taking behaviour aversion in young children and well-being • Ethics 73 – Workplace Collaboration possibilities • Self-determination theory and relationship with attitudes, motivations, behaviours and subjective well-being across many diverse settings • Many other areas open for discussion • Please contact me to discuss possibilities 74 Useful References • • • • • • • • • • • • Cheng, H. and A. Furnham (2003). "Personality, self-esteem, and demographic predictions of happiness and depression." Personality and Individual Differences 34(6): 921-942. Cummins, R. A. (1998). "The second approximation to an international standard for life satisfaction." Social Indicators Research 43(3): 307-334. Cummins, R. A., (1995). On the trail of the gold standard for subjective wellbeing, Social Indicators Research. Vol. 35, No. 2, Pp 179-200 Cummins , R. A., (1996). The domains of life satisfaction: An attempt to order chaos. Social Indicators Research. Vol. 38, No. 3, Pp 303-328 Cummins, R. A. (2000). "Objective and Subjective Quality of Life: an Interactive Model." Social Indicators Research 52(1): 55-72. Cummins, R. A. (2003). "Normative life satisfaction: Measurement issues and a homeostatic model." Social Indicators Research 64(2): 225-256. Cummins, R. A. (2005). "The domains of life satisfaction: An attempt to order chaos." Citation classics from social indicators research: 559-584. Cummins, R. A., R. Eckersley, et al. (2003). "Developing a national index of subjective wellbeing: The Australian Unity Wellbeing Index." Social Indicators Research 64(2): 159-190. Cummins, R. A., R. Eckersley, et al. (2003). "Developing a national index of subjective wellbeing: The Australian Unity Wellbeing Index." Social Indicators Research 64(2): 159-190. Davern, M. and R. A. Cummins (2006). "Is life dissatisfaction the opposite of life satisfaction?" Australian journal of psychology 58(1): 1-7. Davern, M. T., R. A. Cummins, et al. (2007). "Subjective wellbeing as an affective-cognitive construct." Journal of Happiness Studies 8(4): 429-449. Deci, EL & Ryan, RM 2000, 'The "What" and "Why" of Goal Pursuits: Human Needs and the Self 75 Determination of Behaviour', Psychological Inquiry, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 227-268. References • • • • • • • • • • • Furnham, A. and H. Cheng (1999). "Personality as predictor of mental health and happiness in the East and West." Personality and Individual Differences 27(3): 395-403. Jones, L. V. and L. L. Thurstone (1955). "The psychophysics of semantics: an experimental investigation." Journal of Applied Psychology 39(1): 31. Lyubomirsky, S., L. King, et al. (2005). "The benefits of frequent positive affect: does happiness lead to success?" Psychological bulletin 131(6): 803. Sirgy, M. J., Gurel-Atay, E., Webb, D., Cicic, M., Husic, M., Ekici, A., Herrmann, A., Hegazy, I., Lee, D. J., Johar, V., (2013), “Is materialism all that bad? Effects on satisfaction with material life, life satisfaction, and economic motivation,” Social Indicators Research, Vol 10, Issue 1, Pp 349-367. DOI 10.1007/s11205-011-9934-2 Sirgy, M. J., Gurel-Atay , E., Webb, D., Cicic, M., Husic, M., Ekici, A., Herrmann, A., Hegazy, I., Lee, D.-J. & Johar, J. S. (2012). Linking advertising, materialism, and life satisfaction. Social Indicators Research, DOI: 10.1007/s11205-0119829-2. Volume 107, Number 1, Pages 79-101 Steel, P. and D. S. Ones (2002). "Personality and happiness: a national-level analysis." Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 83(3): 767. Webb, D. (2009). "Subjective wellbeing on the Tibetan plateau: An exploratory investigation." Journal of Happiness Studies 10(6): 753-768. Webb, D. and V. Khoo (2010). "Exploring Singaporean Giving Behaviour to Different Charitable Causes." Journal of Research for Consumers. Webb, D. and K. Stuart (2007). "Benefiting Remote Tibetan Communities with Solar Cooker Technology." Practicing Anthropology 29(2): 28-31. Webb, D. and K. Stuart (2007). "Exploring the impact of providing alternative technology products in remote Tibetan communities." Journal of Research for Consumers(12): 1-13. Webb, D., and Wong, J., (In review). Exploring the values and attitudes associated with charitable donations and the 76 impact on subjective well-being. Submitted 12 November 2012 to Social Indicators Research, Springer, The Netherlands. Thank you for inviting me to Osaka and for listening Question time.... 77