Study | Abdel-Khalek (2010a): study KW 2004 |
Title | Religiosity, Subjective Well-Being, and Neuroticism. |
Source | Mental Health, Religion and Culture, 2010, Vol. 13, 67 - 79. |
URL | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13674670903154167?scroll=top&needAccess=true |
DOI | doi: 10.1080/13674670903!54167 |
Public | Students, Kuwait, 2004 |
Sample | Non-probability purposive sample |
Non-Response | |
Respondents N = | 487 |
Correlate | |
Author's label | Religious belief |
Page in Source | 73-74 |
Our classification | Religiosity (degree) |
Operationalization | Selfreport on single question: 'What is the strenghts of your religious belief when compared to others?: 0 minimum : 10 maximum |
Observed distribution | Males: M = 6,43 SD 2,54; Females: M = 6,75, SD 2,16 |
Error Estimates | 1 week test-retest reliability: r = +.81 |
Observed Relation with Happiness | ||
Happiness Measure | Statistics | Elaboration/Remarks |
M-FH-g-sq-n-11-a | r=+.34 p < .0001 | |
O-SLu-g-sq-n-11-i | r=+.31 p < .00001 |
Code | Full Text |
M-FH-g-sq-n-11-a | Selfreport on single question: "Generally speaking, how (much) do you feel happy? What score do you give if we put ten for 'extremely happy, zero for extremely unhappy' and five for neither happy nor unhappy'?" 10 extremely happy 9 8 7 6 5 neither happy nor unhappy 4 3 2 1 0 extremely unhappy |
O-SLu-g-sq-n-11-i | Selfreport on single question: To what degree do you feel satisfied with your life in general? 10 maximum 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 minimum |
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. |