Study | Gschwandtner et al. (2015): study GB 2012 |
Title | On the Relationship between Lifestyle and Happiness in the UK. |
Source | Paper for 89th Annual Conference of AES, 2015, 1 - 33, Warwick, England |
URL | http://econpapers.repec.org/paper/agsaesc15/204199.htm |
Public | 16+ aged, general public UK, 2012 |
Sample | Probability multistage stratified area sample |
Non-Response | |
Respondents N = | 31946 |
Correlate | |
Author's label | Single parent family |
Page in Source | 13, 15 |
Our classification | Single parent |
Operationalization | 1 single parent 0 not |
Observed distribution | males: 10 %, females 11% |
Observed Relation with Happiness | ||
Happiness Measure | Statistics | Elaboration/Remarks |
O-SLW-u-sq-n-7-e | b=- s | - males -.07 (ns) - females -.13 (01) b's controled for: - age - socio-economic backgroud (parents education) - own education - household income - marital status - employment status - ethnicity - region - health behavior - daily consumption of fruits and vegetables - days walk - sporting |
Code | Full Text |
O-SLW-u-sq-n-7-e | Selfreport on single question: How dissatisfied or satisfied are you with your life as a whole? 1 not satisfied at all 2 3 4 5 6 7 completely satisfied |
Symbol | Explanation |
b | REGRESSION COEFFICIENT (non-standardized) by LEAST SQUARES (OLS) Type: test statistic Measurement level: Correlate: metric, Happiness: metric Theoretical range: unlimited Meaning: b > 0 A higher correlate level corresponds with a higher happiness rating on average. B < 0 A higher correlate level corresponds with a lower happiness rating on average. B = 0 Not any correlation with the relevant correlate. |