Well-being and the anticipation of future positive experiences: The role of income, social networks, and planning ability
Title:
Well-being and the anticipation of future positive experiences: The role of income, social networks, and planning ability
Author:
MacLeod, Andrew K. Conway, Clare
Appeared in:
Cognition & emotion
Paging:
Volume 19 (2005) nr. 3 pages 357-374
Year:
2005
Contents:
The present study aims to answer two questions: (1) are expectations of future positive experiences related to well-being in the general population?; and (2) what factors (social, psychological, economic) enable people to have expectations of future positive experiences. A community sample (N = 84) was assessed on a measure of anticipation of future positive and negative experiences, factors that might enable positive anticipation (measures of income, social networks, planning ability, and affective capacity) and measures of subjective well-being (positive and negative affect and life satisfaction). Subjective well-being was related to having more anticipated positive experiences, which was in turn related to having a large social network, having a high number of steps in plans to achieve goals, and, more marginally, to having a high household income.