Authors
Kennon M Sheldon, Richard Ryan, Harry T Reis
Publication date
1996/12
Journal
Personality and social psychology bulletin
Volume
22
Issue
12
Pages
1270-1279
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
This diary study examined the proposal that satisfaction of two psychological needs, competence and autonomy, leads to daily well-being. Between-subjects analyses indicated that participants higher in trait competence and trait autonomy tended to have "better" days on average. Independently, within-subject analyses showed that good days were those in which participants felt more competent and autonomous in their daily activities, relative to their own baselines. Other predictors of daily well-being included gender, whether the day fell on a weekend, and the amount of negative affect and physical symptomatology felt the day before. Although past diary studies have tended to focus on threats to daily well-being, the authors suggest that psychological need concepts offer promise for understanding its positive sources.
Total citations
19971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320245910141615211732273442505776821019610210612110615095104836742
Scholar articles
KM Sheldon, R Ryan, HT Reis - Personality and social psychology bulletin, 1996