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Correlational findings

Study Passmore et al. (2018): study CA 2017

Public
Aged 17-40, undergraduate university students, Canada, 2017
Survey name
Unnamed study
Sample
Respondents
N = 230
Non Response
Assessment

Assessment not reported

Correlate

Authors's Label
Incremental beliefs in well-being
Our Classification
Operationalization
The extent to which respondents believe that
well-being can be cultivated.
Selfreport on 4 items, e.g. 'No matter what you are, you can significantly change your well-being level'.
Rated on a 5-point scale (strongly agree to 5 strongly disagree). Scores were reverse scored when appropriate and then summed. Instructions to participants defined well-being as 'the extent to which people feel good and function well in their lives'.

Observed Relation with Happiness

Happiness Measure Statistics Elaboration / Remarks A-AB-cm-mq-v-5-f r = +.37 p < .001