Study | Wu et al. (2014): study TW 2009 |
Title | On the Predictive Effect of Multidimensional Importance-Weighted Quality of Life Scores on Overall Subjective Well-Being. |
Source | Social Indicators Research, 2014, 115, 933 - 943 |
URL | http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11205-013-0242-x |
DOI | DOI: 10.1007/s11205-013-0242-x |
Public | Students, Taiwan, 200? |
Sample | Non-probability chunk sample |
Non-Response | |
Respondents N = | 146 |
Correlate | |
Author's label | Sex |
Page in Source | 937.939 |
Our classification | Satisfaction with sex-life |
Operationalization | Selfreport on single question: How satisfied are you with your sex life? 1 Very dissatisfied 2 Dissatisfied 3 Neither satisfied nor dissatisfied 4 Satisfied 5 Very satisfied |
Observed distribution | Mean: 3.52: SD=.84 |
Remarks | Question on sex taken from WHOQOL-Bref. Question on importance figured in the full WHOQOL questionnaire. |
Observed Relation with Happiness | ||
Happiness Measure | Statistics | Elaboration/Remarks |
O-QOL-c-sq-v-5-b | r=+.14 ns | raw score |
O-QOL-c-sq-v-5-b | r=+.17 p < .05 | score weighted by perceived importance |
Code | Full Text |
O-QOL-c-sq-v-5-b | Selfreport on single question: How do you feel about your life just now? 5 excellent 4 good 3 neither good nor bad 2 bad 1 very bad |
Symbol | Explanation |
r | PRODUCT-MOMENT CORRELATION COEFFICIENT (Also "Pearson's correlation coefficient' or simply 'correlation coefficient') Type: test statistic. Measurement level: Correlate: metric, Happiness: metric Range: [-1; +1] Meaning: r = 0 « no correlation , r = 1 « perfect correlation, where high correlate values correspond with high happiness values, and r = -1 « perfect correlation, where high correlate values correspond with low happiness values. |