Nima Ali Al, Garcia Danilo, Sikström Sverker, Cloninger Kevin M
Department of Psychology, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Promotion of Health and Innovation Lab (PHI), International Network for Well-Being, Sweden.
Heliyon. 2024 Jan 12;10(2):e24386. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e24386. eCollection 2024 Jan 30.
Happiness is often conceptualized as subjective well-being, which comprises people's evaluations of emotional experiences (i.e., the affective dimension: positive and negative feelings and emotions) and judgements of a self-imposed ideal (i.e., the cognitive dimension: life satisfaction). Recent research has established these two dimensions as primary parts of a higher order factor. However, theoretical, conceptual, and empirical work suggest that people's evaluations of harmony in their life (i.e., the sense of balance and capacity to behave and adapt with both acceptance and flexibility to inter- and intrapersonal circumstances) constitutes a third dimension (i.e., the behavioral dimension). This tridemensional conceptualization of subjective well-being has recently been verified using Unidimensional Item Response Theory (UIRT) and Classical Test Theory (CTT). Here, we use a recently developed and more robust approach that combines these two methods (i.e., Multidimensional Item Response Theory, MIRT) to address the complex interactions and multidimensionality behind how people feel, think, and behave in relation to happiness in their life.
A total of 435 participants (197 males and 238 females) with an age mean of 44.84 ( = 13.36) responded to the Positive Affect Negative Affect Schedule (10 positive affect items, 10 negative affect items), the Satisfaction with Life Scale (five items), and the Harmony in life Scale (five items). We used Bifactor-Graded Response MIRT for the main analyses.
At the general level, each of the 30 items had a strong capacity to discriminate between respondents across all three dimensions of subjective well-being. The investigation of different parameters (e.g., marginal slopes, ECV, IECV) strongly reflected the multidimensionality of subjective well-being at the item, the scale, and the model level. Indeed, subjective well-being could explain 64 % of the common variance in the whole model. Moreover, most of the items measuring positive affect (8/10) and life satisfaction (4/5) and all the items measuring harmony in life (5/5) accounted for a larger amount of variance of subjective well-being compared to that of their respective individual dimensions. The negative affect items, however, measured its own individual concept to a lager extent rather than subjective well-being. Thus, suggesting that the experience of negative affect is a more independent dimension within the whole subjective well-being model. We also found that specific items (e.g., "Alert", "Distressed", "Irritable", "I am satisfied with my life") were the recurrent exceptions in our results. Last but not the least, experiencing high levels in one dimension seems to compensate for low levels in the others and vice versa.
As expected, the three subjective well-being dimensions do not work separately. Interestingly, the order and magnitude of the effect by each dimension on subjective well-being mirror how people define happiness in their life: first as harmony, second as satisfaction, third as positive emotions, and fourth, albeit to a much lesser degree, as negative emotions. Ergo, we argue that subjective well-being functions as a complex biopsychosocial adaptive system mirroring our attitude towards life in these three dimensions (A: affective dimension; B: behavioral dimension; C: cognitive dimension). Ergo, researchers and practitioners need to take in to account all three to fully understand, measure, and promote people's experience of the happy life. Moreover, our results also suggest that negative affect, especially regarding high activation unpleasant emotions, need considerable changes and further analyses if it is going to be included as a construct within the affective dimension of a general subjective well-being factor.
幸福通常被概念化为主观幸福感,它包括人们对情感体验的评价(即情感维度:积极和消极的感受与情绪)以及对自我设定理想的判断(即认知维度:生活满意度)。最近的研究已将这两个维度确立为一个高阶因素的主要组成部分。然而,理论、概念和实证研究表明,人们对生活和谐的评价(即平衡感以及在人际和个人环境中以接纳和灵活的方式行为与适应的能力)构成了第三个维度(即行为维度)。主观幸福感的这种三维概念化最近已通过单维项目反应理论(UIRT)和经典测试理论(CTT)得到验证。在此,我们使用一种最近开发的、更强大的方法,该方法结合了这两种方法(即多维项目反应理论,MIRT),以解决人们在生活中与幸福相关的感受、思考和行为背后的复杂相互作用和多维性。
共有435名参与者(197名男性和238名女性),平均年龄为44.84岁(标准差 = 13.36),他们对积极情感消极情感量表(10个积极情感项目,10个消极情感项目)、生活满意度量表(5个项目)和生活和谐量表(5个项目)进行了回应。我们使用双因素分级反应MIRT进行主要分析。
在总体水平上,30个项目中的每一个都具有很强的能力,能够在主观幸福感的所有三个维度上区分受访者。对不同参数(例如,边际斜率、ECV、IECV)的研究强烈反映了主观幸福感在项目、量表和模型层面的多维性。事实上,主观幸福感可以解释整个模型中64%的共同方差。此外,与各自的单个维度相比,大多数测量积极情感的项目(8/10)和生活满意度的项目(4/5)以及所有测量生活和谐的项目(5/5)在主观幸福感的方差中占比更大。然而,消极情感项目在很大程度上测量的是其自身的个体概念,而非主观幸福感。因此,这表明消极情感体验在整个主观幸福感模型中是一个更独立的维度。我们还发现特定项目(例如,“警觉”、“苦恼”、“易怒”、“我对自己的生活感到满意”)是我们结果中的常见例外。最后但同样重要的是,在一个维度上处于高水平似乎可以弥补其他维度上的低水平,反之亦然。
正如预期的那样,主观幸福感的三个维度并非独立起作用。有趣的是,每个维度对主观幸福感影响的顺序和程度反映了人们在生活中对幸福的定义:首先是和谐,其次是满意度,第三是积极情绪,第四,尽管程度要小得多,是消极情绪。因此,我们认为主观幸福感作为一个复杂的生物心理社会适应系统,反映了我们在这三个维度上对生活的态度(A:情感维度;B:行为维度;C:认知维度)。因此,研究人员和从业者需要考虑所有三个维度,以充分理解、测量和促进人们对幸福生活的体验。此外,我们的结果还表明,如果要将消极情感,特别是关于高激活不愉快情绪的消极情感作为一般主观幸福感因素情感维度中的一个构念纳入,需要进行相当大的改变并进一步分析。