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Correlational findings

Study Wessman & Ricks (1966): study US 1957 /1

Public
Male college students, followed 3 years, Harvard University, USA, 1957-60
Sample
Respondents
N = 17
Non Response
37%: 9 dropouts, incomplete; about the same happiness distribution.
Assessment
Multiple assesment methods
Mood diary kept 30 days and repeated interviews and tests during three years.

Correlate

Authors's Label
Companionship vs being isolated
Our Classification
Operationalization
Repeated closed question on 'the extent to which you felt emotionally accepted by, or isolated from other people', ra- ted on a 10-point scale:

10. Complete participation in warm, in-
    timate friendship.
9. Enjoy the warmth of close compan-
    ionship.
8. Thoroughly and genuineley liked.
7. Feel accepted and like.
6. More or less accepted.
5. Feel a little bit left out.
4. Feel somewhat neglected and lonely.
3. Very lonely. No one seems to care
    about me.
2. Tremendously lonely. Friendless and
    forlorn.
1. Completely isolated and forsaken.
    Abandoned. Ache with loneliness.

Scale scored each night for highest, lowest and average experience of the day.
(Wessman & Ricks Companionship vs Being Isolated Scale).

   

Observed Relation with Happiness

Happiness Measure Statistics Elaboration / Remarks A-ARE-md-sqr-v-10-a r = +.43 ns The means of the lowest, average and highest daily scores were correlated with the mean daily average score on the Elation-Depression Scale (AFF 3.1) during 6 weeks.

Daily highest   : r = +.38 (ns)
Daily average   : r = +.43 (ns)
Daily lowest    : r = +.08 (ns)