26
02
2009
I thought you may find this article interesting:
Story Highlights:
- The ‘Virtual Happiness Project’ in the Netherlands looked at the relationship between Web 2.0 and happiness
- The findings suggest that blogs and social networks give people a strong sense of belonging, which can be part of happiness
- It warns, however, that there’s a risk of being too internet-involved, which can detrimentally affect offline relationships
The report is yet to be published, but survey and experimental results point to findings:
that a lot of Facebook users already sense: social interaction is a driver for happiness, and the Web 2.0 is a valid way to experience it.
Read the article here.
(via @akselsoft)
Image by Kevin Zollman
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Author : Michele Connolly
Categories : Happiness media, Happiness research
7
02
2009
The very special New Year’s Resolution prices over at Get Organized Wizard have been extremely popular! But the specials end this week.
If you’d like to get more organized or goal focused, you may be interested in our two most popular tools:
- Life MakeOver Journal is your month-by-month tool for setting SMART goals across all important life areas. It helps you organize goal-related actions, diary items, milestones and rewards, and ensure your goals are specific, measureable, achievable, relevant and time-framed.
- For the girls, Life & Goal Organizer is a 360-degree life & goal organizer. There are over 340 pages and more than 150 ready-made action plans across 12 areas to help you get your whole life organized.
The special prices end on Sunday – don’t miss out!
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Author : Michele Connolly
Categories : Get Organized Now
5
02
2009
Look alive!
A new study has found that thinking
fast can improve your mood.
Princeton and Harvard researchers conducted six experiments requiring participants to briskly whisk through activities such as brainstorming, reading ideas on screen or watching a fast-forwarded film clip.
Thinking fast brought participants creativity, elation and, to a lesser extent, a sense of energy and power.
Scientific American observes:
It is unclear why thought speed affects mood, but [the study’s lead author, Emily] Pronin and her colleagues theorize that our own expectations may be part of the equation. In earlier research, they found that people generally believe fast thinking is a sign of a good mood. This lay belief may lead us to instinctively infer that if we are thinking quickly we must be happy. In addition, they suggest, thinking quickly may unleash the brain’s novelty-loving dopamine system, which is involved in sensations of pleasure and reward.
So up your thinking speed – and you’ll join the ranks of the quick and the glad.
Image by jurvetson
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Author : Michele Connolly
Categories : Happiness media, Happiness research