Recent theories suggest an important role of neuroticism, extraversion, attitudes, and global positive orientations as predictors of subjective happiness. We examined whether positivity mediates the hypothesized relations in a community sample of 504 adults between the ages of 20 and 60 years old (females = 50%). A model with significant paths from neuroticism to subjective happiness, from extraversion and neuroticism to positivity, and from positivity to subjective happiness fitted the data (Satorra–Bentler scaled chi-square (38) = 105.91; Comparative Fit Index = .96; Non-Normed Fit Index = .95; Root Mean Square Error of Approximation = .060; 90% confidence interval = .046, .073). The percentage of subjective happiness variance accounted for by personality traits was only about 48%, whereas adding positivity as a mediating factor increased the explained amount of subjective happi-ness to 78%. The mediation model was invariant by age and gender. The results show that the effect of extraversion on happiness was fully mediated by positivity, whereas the effect of neuroticism was only partially mediated. Implications for happiness studies are also discussed.

Does positivity mediate the relation of extraversion and neuroticism with subjective happiness? / Lauriola, Marco; L., Iani. - In: PLOS ONE. - ISSN 1932-6203. - 10(3) e0121991:(2015), pp. 1-16. [10.1371/journal.pone.0121991]

Does positivity mediate the relation of extraversion and neuroticism with subjective happiness?

LAURIOLA, Marco;
2015

Abstract

Recent theories suggest an important role of neuroticism, extraversion, attitudes, and global positive orientations as predictors of subjective happiness. We examined whether positivity mediates the hypothesized relations in a community sample of 504 adults between the ages of 20 and 60 years old (females = 50%). A model with significant paths from neuroticism to subjective happiness, from extraversion and neuroticism to positivity, and from positivity to subjective happiness fitted the data (Satorra–Bentler scaled chi-square (38) = 105.91; Comparative Fit Index = .96; Non-Normed Fit Index = .95; Root Mean Square Error of Approximation = .060; 90% confidence interval = .046, .073). The percentage of subjective happiness variance accounted for by personality traits was only about 48%, whereas adding positivity as a mediating factor increased the explained amount of subjective happi-ness to 78%. The mediation model was invariant by age and gender. The results show that the effect of extraversion on happiness was fully mediated by positivity, whereas the effect of neuroticism was only partially mediated. Implications for happiness studies are also discussed.
2015
general self-efficacy; cross-sectional analyses; personality-traits; life satisfaction; longitudinal mediation; fit indexes; esteem; adolescents; beliefs; scale
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Does positivity mediate the relation of extraversion and neuroticism with subjective happiness? / Lauriola, Marco; L., Iani. - In: PLOS ONE. - ISSN 1932-6203. - 10(3) e0121991:(2015), pp. 1-16. [10.1371/journal.pone.0121991]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/783076
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