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Correlational findings

Study Booth & VanOurs (2009): study AU 2001

Public
Couples, Australia, followed 4 years 2001-2004
Sample
Respondents
N = 8170
Non Response
Assessment
Interview: face-to-face

Correlate

Authors's Label
Child born
Our Classification
Distribution
score =.05
Related specification variables
Operationalization
0: No child born in household
1: New child born in household

Observed Relation with Happiness

Happiness Measure Statistics Elaboration / Remarks O-SLu-u-sq-n-11-a OLRC = + p < .05 ALL (correlation with couple's average happiness)                          + 0,22 O-SLu-u-sq-n-11-a OLRC = + p < .10 WIVES ONLY                          + 0,17 O-SLu-u-sq-n-11-a OLRC = + p < .05 HUSBANDS ONLY                       + 0,20

OLCR's controlled for:
- family income
- health of spouce
- own health
- own employment
- employment of spouse

OLRC cannot be interpreted as an absolute
effect size and denotes only relative
differences
O-SLu-u-sq-n-11-a = Fixed effect analysis yields similar results and this suggests that no other intervening variables are involved. (Fixed effect analysis uses person dummies to control for unobserved variables such as personality)