Although cross-sectional studies have shown a reliable association between marital status and subjective well-being, a recent longitudinal study [Lucas et al. 2003, Journal of Personality & Social Psychology 84(3), pp.␣527-539] found no support for the idea that happiness increases after marriage. Instead, participants who got married reported short-term increases followed by complete adaptation back to baseline levels of well-being. However, researchers have criticized this study on two grounds. First, these results contradict cohort-based analyses from a nationally representative sample. Second, these analyses do not control for pre-marriage cohabitation, which could potentially inflate baseline levels of well-being. The original data (pl...
This paper revisits the marriage and wellbeing relationship using variables reflecting marriage qual...
In an attempt to disentangle the causal relationship between marital status and psychological well-b...
Historically, the married have had better well-being outcomes than the unmarried. The decline in mar...
Although cross-sectional studies have shown a reliable association between marital status and subjec...
ABSTRACT. Although cross-sectional studies have shown a reliable associ-ation between marital status...
According to adaptation theory, individuals react to events but quickly adapt back to baseline level...
On average, marriage tends to lead to temporary increases in life satisfaction, which quickly return...
(revised version) Abstract: This paper analyzes the causal relationships between marriage and subjec...
On average, marriage tends to lead to temporary increases in life satisfaction, which quickly return...
Prior research on marriage has tended to focus on cross-sectional differences between the married an...
AbstractOn average, marriage tends to lead to temporary increases in life satisfaction, which quickl...
Although marriage and cohabitation appear to be increasingly equivalent across Western countries, ex...
Many studies have established that married people fare better than their never-married counterparts ...
This paper analyzes the causal relationships between marriage and subjective well-being in a longitu...
Economists have for some time been aware that human beings reap financial benefits from marriage. Ev...
This paper revisits the marriage and wellbeing relationship using variables reflecting marriage qual...
In an attempt to disentangle the causal relationship between marital status and psychological well-b...
Historically, the married have had better well-being outcomes than the unmarried. The decline in mar...
Although cross-sectional studies have shown a reliable association between marital status and subjec...
ABSTRACT. Although cross-sectional studies have shown a reliable associ-ation between marital status...
According to adaptation theory, individuals react to events but quickly adapt back to baseline level...
On average, marriage tends to lead to temporary increases in life satisfaction, which quickly return...
(revised version) Abstract: This paper analyzes the causal relationships between marriage and subjec...
On average, marriage tends to lead to temporary increases in life satisfaction, which quickly return...
Prior research on marriage has tended to focus on cross-sectional differences between the married an...
AbstractOn average, marriage tends to lead to temporary increases in life satisfaction, which quickl...
Although marriage and cohabitation appear to be increasingly equivalent across Western countries, ex...
Many studies have established that married people fare better than their never-married counterparts ...
This paper analyzes the causal relationships between marriage and subjective well-being in a longitu...
Economists have for some time been aware that human beings reap financial benefits from marriage. Ev...
This paper revisits the marriage and wellbeing relationship using variables reflecting marriage qual...
In an attempt to disentangle the causal relationship between marital status and psychological well-b...
Historically, the married have had better well-being outcomes than the unmarried. The decline in mar...