Can people remember correctly their past well-being? We study three national surveys of the British, German and French population, where more than 50,000 European citizens were asked questions about their current and past life satisfaction. We uncover systematic biases in recalled subjective well-being: on average, people tend to overstate the improvement in their well-being over time and to understate their past happiness. But this aggregate figure hides a deep asymmetry: while happy people recall the evolution of their life to be better than it was, unhappy ones tend to exaggerate its worsening. It thus seems that feeling happy today implies feeling better than yesterday. These results offer an explanation of why happy people are more opt...
Studies among adult populations show that estimates of how happy one has felt in the past tend to be...
Research in the past 2 decades has made great strides in understanding cross-cultural differences in...
This paper identifies subjective well-being trajectories through happiness measures as influenced by...
Can people remember correctly their past well-being? We study three national surveys of the British,...
International audienceCan people remember their past happiness? We analyzed data from four longitudi...
Are Americans happier, or less happy, than they used to be? The answer may depend on life stage. We ...
This paper appeals to novel survey information on over 30 000 individuals in 21 European countries t...
This paper appeals to novel survey information on over 30 000 individuals in 21 European countries t...
Are Americans happier, or less happy, than they used to be? The answer may depend on life stage. We ...
Research in the past 2 decades has made great strides in understanding cross-cultural differences in...
To what extent do our beliefs about how our well-being has improved over time correspond to observed...
Studies among adult populations show that estimates of how happy one has felt in the past tend to be...
Research in the past 2 decades has made great strides in understanding cross-cultural differences in...
This paper identifies subjective well-being trajectories through happiness measures as influenced by...
Can people remember correctly their past well-being? We study three national surveys of the British,...
International audienceCan people remember their past happiness? We analyzed data from four longitudi...
Are Americans happier, or less happy, than they used to be? The answer may depend on life stage. We ...
This paper appeals to novel survey information on over 30 000 individuals in 21 European countries t...
This paper appeals to novel survey information on over 30 000 individuals in 21 European countries t...
Are Americans happier, or less happy, than they used to be? The answer may depend on life stage. We ...
Research in the past 2 decades has made great strides in understanding cross-cultural differences in...
To what extent do our beliefs about how our well-being has improved over time correspond to observed...
Studies among adult populations show that estimates of how happy one has felt in the past tend to be...
Research in the past 2 decades has made great strides in understanding cross-cultural differences in...
This paper identifies subjective well-being trajectories through happiness measures as influenced by...