Responsiveness as a Key Predictor of Happiness: Mechanisms and Unanswered Questions

  • Selcuk E
  • Karagobek A
  • Gunaydin G
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Abstract

The importance of close relationships for happiness has long been recog- nized. This long-held interest has produced an increase in relevant empirical work investigating the links between relationships and personal well-being in the last three decades. Recent attempts at integrating this vast body of literature suggest that responsiveness—i.e., the belief that close relationship partners understand, validate, and care for us—is a core process linking close relationships to health and happi- ness. In the present chapter, we review the links between responsiveness and happi- ness, with an emphasis on studies of marital and long-term romantic relationships. The available evidence indicates that partner responsiveness improves happiness in both negative contexts (by preserving happiness in the face of stress and adversity) and positive contexts (by augmenting and prolonging happiness induced by pleasant events and supporting the pursuit of personally meaningful goals and self- actualization). We believe that future work should build on this literature by inves- tigating intergenerational effects of partner responsiveness on offspring happiness, comparing the roles of different social network members in happiness, examining how cultural grounding of relationships modulate the responsiveness-happiness link, and identifying the different components of responsiveness critical for happi- ness across cultures and developmental stages.

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Selcuk, E., Karagobek, A. B., & Gunaydin, G. (2018). Responsiveness as a Key Predictor of Happiness: Mechanisms and Unanswered Questions (pp. 1–18). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89663-2_1

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