Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology & Program for Leadership and Character Wake Forest University Winston‐Salem North Carolina USA
2. Department of Business Administration University of Hawaii‐West Oahu Kapolei Hawaii USA
3. School of Psychology University of Nottingham Nottingham UK
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveLife events can impact people's dispositional functioning by changing their state‐level patterns of thoughts, feelings, and behavior. One pathway through which this change may be facilitated is changes in the experience of daily social events.MethodWe examined the dynamic relationship between major life events and the subsequent experience of positive and negative daily social events in a year‐long longitudinal study (initial N = 1247).ResultsExperiencing positive and negative major life events moderated the effects of positive and negative social events on event‐contingent state well‐being and ill‐being in ways that were mostly (but not always) consistent with both endowment and contrast effects on judgments of well‐being. Furthermore, negative life events predicted an increase in the subsequent trajectory of negative social events, while the experience of daily ill‐being predicted the subsequent experience of negative social events.ConclusionsThese findings highlight the possible impact of major life events by explaining how they shape the subsequent experience of daily social events.
Funder
John Templeton Foundation
Cited by
2 articles.
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