首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The Science of Lasting Happiness The day I meet Sonja Lyubomirsky, she keeps getting calls from her Toyota, Prius dealer. W
The Science of Lasting Happiness The day I meet Sonja Lyubomirsky, she keeps getting calls from her Toyota, Prius dealer. W
admin
2010-09-25
30
问题
The Science of Lasting Happiness
The day I meet Sonja Lyubomirsky, she keeps getting calls from her Toyota, Prius dealer. When she finally picks up, she is excited by the news:she can buy the car she wants in two days. Lyubomirsky wonders if her enthusiasm might come across as materialism, but I understand that she is buying an experience as much as a possession. Two weeks later, in late January, the 40-year-old Lyubomirsky, who smiles often and seems to approach life with zest and good humor, reports that she is "totally loving the Prius". But will the feeling wear off soon after the new-car smell, or will it last, making a naturally happy person even more so?
The Possibility of Lasting Happiness
An experimental psychologist investigating the possibility of lasting happiness, Lyubomirsky understands far better than most of us the folly of pinning our hopes on a new car--or on any good fortune that comes our way. We tend to adapt, quickly returning to our usual level of happiness. The classic example of such "hedonic adaptatiou" (享乐适应)comes from a 1970s study of lottery winners, who ended up no happier than nonwinners a year. after their windfall (意外横财). Hedonic adaptation helps to explain why even changes in major life circumstances--such as income, marriage, physical health and where we live--do so little to boost our overall happiness. Not only that, but studies of twins and adoptees have shown that about 50 percent of each person’s happiness is determined from birth. This "genetic set point" alone makes the happiness glass look half empty, because any upward swing in happiness seems doomed to fall back to near your baseline. "There’s been a tension in the field, "explains Lyubomirsky’s main collaborator, psychologist Kennon M. Sheldon of the University of Missouri-Columbia. "Some people were assuming you can affect happiness if, for example, you picked the right goals, but there was all this literature that suggested it was impossible, that what goes up must come down."
The Happiness Pie
Lyubomirsky, Sheldon and another psychologist, David A. Schkade of the University of California, San Diego, put the existing findings together into a simple pie chart showing what determines happiness. Half the pie is the genetic set point. The smallest slice is circumstances, which explain only about 10 percent of people’s differences in happiness. So what is the remaining 40 percent? "Because nobody had put it together before, that’s unexplained," Lyubomirsky says. But she believes that when you take away genes and circumstances, what is left besides error must be "intentional activity", mental and behavioral strategies to counteract adaptation’s downward pull.
Lyubomirsky has been studying these activities in hopes of finding out whether and how people can stay above their set point. In theory, that is possible in much the same way regular diet and exercise can keep athletes’ weight below their genetic set points. But before Lyubomirsky began, there was "a huge vacuum of research on how to increase happiness", she says. The lottery study in particular "made people shy away from interventions", explains eminent University of Pennsylvania psychologist Martin E. P. Seligman, the father of positive psychology and a mentor to Lyubomirsky. When science had scrutinized (细察) happiness at all, it was mainly through correlational studies, which cannot tell what came first--the happiness or what it is linked to--let alone determine the cause and effect. Finding out that individuals with strong social ties are more satisfied with their lives than loners, for example, begs the question of whether friends make us happier or whether happy people are simply like lier to seek and attract friends.
Lyubemirsky’s Research
Lyubomirsky began studying happiness as a graduate student in 1989 after an intriguing conversation with her adviser, Stanford University psychologist Lee D. Ross, who told her about a remarkably happy friend who had lost both parents to the Holocaust(大屠杀). Ross explains it this way, "For this person, the meaning of the Holocaust was that it was inappropriate to be unhappy about trivial things--and that one should strive to find joy in life and human relationships." Psychologists have long known that different people can see and think about the same events in different ways, but they had done little research on how these interpretations affect well-being.
So Lyubomirsky had to lay some groundwork before she could go into the lab. Back then, happiness was "a fuzzy, unscientific topic", she says, and although no instrument yet exists for giving perfectly valid, reliable and precise readings of someone’s happiness from session to session, Lyubomirsky has brought scientific strictness to the emerging field. From her firm belief that it is each person’s self-reported happiness that matters, she developed a four-question Subjective Happiness Scale. Lyubomirsky’s working definition of happiness--"a joyful, contented life"--gets at both the feelings and judgments necessary for overall happiness. To this day, she rarely sees her studies’ participants; they do most exercises out in the real world and answer detailed questionnaires on the computer, often from home. To assess subjects’ efforts and honesty, she uses several crosschecks, such as timing them as they complete the questionnaires.
The research needed to answer questions about lasting happiness is costly, because studies need to follow a sizable group of people over a long time. Two and a half years ago Lyubomirsky and Sheldon received a five-year, $1million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to do just that. Investigators have no shortage of possible strategies to test, with happiness advice coming "from the Buddha to Tony Robbins", as Seligman puts it. So Lyubomirsky started with three promising strategies: kindness, gratitude and optimism--all of which past research had linked with happiness.
Her aim is not merely to confirm the strategies’ effectiveness but to gain insights into how happiness works. For example, conventional wisdom suggests keeping a daily gratitude journal. But one study revealed that those who had been assigned to do that ended up less happy than those who had to count their blessings only once a week. Lyubomirsky therefore confirmed her hunch (预感)that timing is important. So is variety, it turned out: a kindness intervention found that participants told to vary their good deeds ended up happier than those forced into a kindness rut. Lyubomirsky is also asking about mediators: Why, for example, does acting kind make you happier? "I’m a basic researcher, not an applied researcher, so I’m interested not so much in the strategies but in how they work and what goes on behind the scenes," she explains.
Initial results with the interventions have been promising, but sustaining them is tough. Months after a study is over, the people who have stopped the exercises show a drop in happiness. Like a drug or a diet, the exercises work only if you stick with them. Instilling habits is crucial. Another key: "fit", or how well the exercise matches the person. If sitting down to imagine your best possible self (an optimism exercise) feels contrived, you will be less likely to do it. The biggest factor may be getting over the idea that happiness is fixed-and realizing that sustained effort can boost it. "A lot of people don’t apply the notion of effort to their emotional lives," Lyubomirsky declares, "but the effort it takes is enormous."
Sonja Lyubomirsky bought the car just because she wanted to own a Prius.
选项
A、Y
B、N
C、NG
答案
B
解析
文章首先提到她因能买到自己喜欢的车而兴奋,接着又提到她并不仅仅是在买一辆车,而且还是在获取一种经历。题干中的just because she wanted to own a Prius和原文中的she is buying an experience as much as a possession相矛盾,因此题干表述错误。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/rwz7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Anineyearoldschoolgirlsinglehandedlycooksupasciencefairexperimentthatendsupdebunking(揭穿真相)awildlypracticedm
Tobetterunderstandthenegotiationpracticesofothercultures,itisimportantforustobeawareofthestandardnegotiation
Tobetterunderstandthenegotiationpracticesofothercultures,itisimportantforustobeawareofthestandardnegotiation
Tobetterunderstandthenegotiationpracticesofothercultures,itisimportantforustobeawareofthestandardnegotiation
Effortistheessenceofhappiness:thereisnohappinessexceptaswetakeonchallenges.Shortoftheimpossible,thesatisfac
Direction:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteacompositiononthetopic:ShouldPrivateCarsBeEncouragedinC
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minute,towriteashortessayentitledWhichIsMoreImportantHealthorWealth?
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledOnMood.Youshouldwriteatleast150wor
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledWhoHastheMostImportantInfluenceonth
随机试题
男,33岁,冬春季发作性节律性上腹部疼痛10年,近一周来疼痛剧烈,以半夜最甚,偶伴呕吐。胃镜检查示十二指肠后壁有直径0.5~1.5cm溃疡,周围充血水肿,诊断为十二指肠球部活动性溃疡入院治疗。为迅速缓解症状,选取用强烈的抑酸药物,下列何者作用最强
2分子乙酰COA经三羧酸循环可生成多少ATP分子
铝合金波纹板是轻型的屋面新材料,下列要点中哪条是错误的?[2003年第010题]
根据新的《中华人民共和国公司法》的规定,()有权决定公司的经营计划和投资方案。
债权人会议主席的产生方式是()。
王某患有间歇性精神病,一日到农家菜馆喝醉酒后将该饭馆老板打成重伤,在警察赶来抓捕时,王某因惊恐而精神病发作,王某应()。
我国宪法的修改,须由全国人民代表大会常务委员会或者()以上的全国人民代表大会代表提议并由全国人民代表大会()以上的多数代表通过。
2000年-2005年,我国农村发电量占用电量比重最大的年份是()。根据上图,下列关于我国农村用电发电情况的表述,正确的一项是()。
我国《刑法》第357条规定,本法所称的毒品,是指鸦片、海洛因、甲基苯丙胺(冰毒)、吗啡、大麻、可卡因以及国家规定管制的其他能够使人形成瘾癖的麻醉药品和精神药品。据此,下列说法正确的是()。
在我国公民的政治权利和自由中,居于首要地位的是()。
最新回复
(
0
)