Behavioral Sciences (Dec 2017)

Contributing to Overall Life Satisfaction: Personality Traits Versus Life Satisfaction Variables Revisited—Is Replication Impossible?

  • Bernd Lachmann,
  • Rayna Sariyska,
  • Christopher Kannen,
  • Konrad Błaszkiewicz,
  • Boris Trendafilov,
  • Ionut Andone,
  • Mark Eibes,
  • Alexander Markowetz,
  • Mei Li,
  • Keith M. Kendrick,
  • Christian Montag

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bs8010001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 1

Abstract

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Virtually everybody would agree that life satisfaction is of immense importance in everyday life. Thus, it is not surprising that a considerable amount of research using many different methodological approaches has investigated what the best predictors of life satisfaction are. In the present study, we have focused on several key potential influences on life satisfaction including bottom-up and top-down models, cross-cultural effects, and demographic variables. In four independent (large scale) surveys with sample sizes ranging from N = 488 to 40,297, we examined the associations between life satisfaction and various related variables. Our findings demonstrate that prediction of overall life satisfaction works best when including information about specific life satisfaction variables. From this perspective, satisfaction with leisure showed the highest impact on overall life satisfaction in our European samples. Personality was also robustly associated with life satisfaction, but only when life satisfaction variables were not included in the regression model. These findings could be replicated in all four independent samples, but it was also demonstrated that the relevance of life satisfaction variables changed under the influence of cross-cultural effects.

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