The COVID-19 pandemic presents challenges to psychological wellbeing, but how can we predict when people suffer or cope during sustained stress? Here, we test the prediction that specific types of momentary emotional experiences are differently linked to psychological wellbeing during the pandemic. Study 1 used survey data collected from 24,221 participants in 51 countries during the COVID-19 outbreak. We show that, across countries, wellbeing is linked to individuals’ recent emotional experiences, including calm, hope, anxiety, loneliness, and sadness. Consistent results are found in two age, sex, and ethnicity-representative samples in the United Kingdom (N = 971) and the United States (N=961) with pre-registered analyses (Study 2). A prospective 30-day daily diary study conducted in the United Kingdom (N = 110) confirms the key role of these five emotions, and demonstrates that emotional experiences precede changes in wellbeing (Study 3). Our findings highlight differential relationships between specific types of momentary emotional experiences and wellbeing, and point to the cultivation of calm and hope as candidate routes for wellbeing interventions during periods of sustained stress.

Emotional experiences and psychological wellbeing in 51 countries during the COVID- 19 pandemic / Sun, Rui; Balabanova, Alisa; Bajada, Claude Julien; Liu, Yang; Kriuchok, Mariia; Voolma, Silja-Riin; Đurić, Mirna; Mayer, Claude-Hélène; Constantinou, Maria; Chichua, Mariam; Li, Chengcheng; Foster-Estwick, Ashley; Borg, Kurt; Hill, Carin; Kaushal, Rishabh; Diwan, Ketaki; Vitale, Valeria; Engels, Tiarah; Amin, Rabiah; Ursu, Irina; Fadhlia, Tengku Nila; Wu, Yi-Jung; Sekaja, Lusanda; Hadchity, Milad; Deak, Anita; Sharaf, Shahira; Figueras, Pau; Kaziboni, Anthony; Whiston, Aoife; Ioumpa, Kalliopi; Montelongo, Alfredo Flores; Pauw, Lisanne Sarah; Pavarini, Gabriela; Vedernikova, Evgeniya; Vu, Tuong-Van; Nummenmaa, Lauri; Cong, Yong-Qi; Nikolic, Milica; Olguin, Andrea; Hou, Wai Kai; Israelashvili, Jacob; Koo, Hyunjin; Khademi, Samaneh; Ukachukwu, Chinwendu Genevive; Juma, Damian Omari; Kamiloglu, Roza Gizem; Makhmud, Akerke; Lunga, Peter Sigurdson; Rieble, Carlotta; Rizwan, Muhammad; Helmy, Mai; Vuillier, Laura; Manokara, Kunalan; Cáceres, Enzo; Tserendamba, Delgermend; Yoshie, Michiko; Du, Amy H.; Philip-Joe, Kumba; Kúld, Pála Björk; Damani, Kalifa; Osei-Tutu, Annabella; Sauter, Disa. - In: EMOTION. - ISSN 1528-3542. - (2023). [10.31234/osf.io/edkbq]

Emotional experiences and psychological wellbeing in 51 countries during the COVID- 19 pandemic.

Vitale, Valeria
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
2023

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic presents challenges to psychological wellbeing, but how can we predict when people suffer or cope during sustained stress? Here, we test the prediction that specific types of momentary emotional experiences are differently linked to psychological wellbeing during the pandemic. Study 1 used survey data collected from 24,221 participants in 51 countries during the COVID-19 outbreak. We show that, across countries, wellbeing is linked to individuals’ recent emotional experiences, including calm, hope, anxiety, loneliness, and sadness. Consistent results are found in two age, sex, and ethnicity-representative samples in the United Kingdom (N = 971) and the United States (N=961) with pre-registered analyses (Study 2). A prospective 30-day daily diary study conducted in the United Kingdom (N = 110) confirms the key role of these five emotions, and demonstrates that emotional experiences precede changes in wellbeing (Study 3). Our findings highlight differential relationships between specific types of momentary emotional experiences and wellbeing, and point to the cultivation of calm and hope as candidate routes for wellbeing interventions during periods of sustained stress.
2023
emotion; wellbeing; stress; COVID-19 pandemic
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Emotional experiences and psychological wellbeing in 51 countries during the COVID- 19 pandemic / Sun, Rui; Balabanova, Alisa; Bajada, Claude Julien; Liu, Yang; Kriuchok, Mariia; Voolma, Silja-Riin; Đurić, Mirna; Mayer, Claude-Hélène; Constantinou, Maria; Chichua, Mariam; Li, Chengcheng; Foster-Estwick, Ashley; Borg, Kurt; Hill, Carin; Kaushal, Rishabh; Diwan, Ketaki; Vitale, Valeria; Engels, Tiarah; Amin, Rabiah; Ursu, Irina; Fadhlia, Tengku Nila; Wu, Yi-Jung; Sekaja, Lusanda; Hadchity, Milad; Deak, Anita; Sharaf, Shahira; Figueras, Pau; Kaziboni, Anthony; Whiston, Aoife; Ioumpa, Kalliopi; Montelongo, Alfredo Flores; Pauw, Lisanne Sarah; Pavarini, Gabriela; Vedernikova, Evgeniya; Vu, Tuong-Van; Nummenmaa, Lauri; Cong, Yong-Qi; Nikolic, Milica; Olguin, Andrea; Hou, Wai Kai; Israelashvili, Jacob; Koo, Hyunjin; Khademi, Samaneh; Ukachukwu, Chinwendu Genevive; Juma, Damian Omari; Kamiloglu, Roza Gizem; Makhmud, Akerke; Lunga, Peter Sigurdson; Rieble, Carlotta; Rizwan, Muhammad; Helmy, Mai; Vuillier, Laura; Manokara, Kunalan; Cáceres, Enzo; Tserendamba, Delgermend; Yoshie, Michiko; Du, Amy H.; Philip-Joe, Kumba; Kúld, Pála Björk; Damani, Kalifa; Osei-Tutu, Annabella; Sauter, Disa. - In: EMOTION. - ISSN 1528-3542. - (2023). [10.31234/osf.io/edkbq]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1680281
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