Relationships between meaning in life, social and achievement events, and positive and negative affect in daily life.

Research on meaning in life has generally focused on global meaning judgments. This study examined how people's daily experiences, represented by events that occur in daily life, influence their perceived sense of meaning on a daily basis. One hundred sixty-two college students completed daily reports for 2 weeks. We examined the relationships among daily social and achievement events, daily positive and negative affect, and daily meaning in life. In addition, we tested the possible moderating influence of depressive symptoms on these relationships. Positive daily social and achievement events were related to greater daily meaning, above and beyond the contributions of daily positive and negative affect. Negative social and achievement events were related to less daily meaning, and negative achievement events covaried with daily meaning above and beyond positive and negative affect. Depression moderated the relationships between positive events and meaning, such that people who reported more depressive symptoms had greater increases in daily meaning in response to positive social and achievement events than individuals who reported fewer symptoms. These findings suggest the important role that daily events may play in fluctuations in people's affective experiences and sense of meaning in life.

[1]  E. Larsen Commentary on: People search for meaning when they approach a new decade in chronological age , 2015, Front. Psychol..

[2]  L. King,et al.  Life is pretty meaningful. , 2014, The American psychologist.

[3]  T. Kashdan,et al.  The unbearable lightness of meaning: Well-being and unstable meaning in life , 2013 .

[4]  T. Kashdan,et al.  Whether, When, and How Is Spirituality Related to Well-Being? Moving Beyond Single Occasion Questionnaires to Understanding Daily Process , 2012, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[5]  John B. Nezlek,et al.  Diary Methods for Social and Personality Psychology , 2012 .

[6]  M. Siemer,et al.  Rumination moderates the effects of daily events on negative mood: results from a diary study. , 2012, Emotion.

[7]  T. Kashdan,et al.  Social Anxiety and Emotion Regulation in Daily Life: Spillover Effects on Positive and Negative Social Events , 2012, Cognitive behaviour therapy.

[8]  L. King,et al.  Being Forgotten: Implications for the Experience of Meaning in Life , 2011, The Journal of social psychology.

[9]  Rebecca J. Schlegel,et al.  Feeling Like You Know Who You Are: Perceived True Self-Knowledge and Meaning in Life , 2011, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[10]  J. Nezlek Multilevel Modeling for Social and Personality Psychology , 2011 .

[11]  Joshua A. Hicks,et al.  Family as a salient source of meaning in young adulthood , 2010 .

[12]  Jeffrey D. Green,et al.  Combating Meaninglessness: On the Automatic Defense of Meaning , 2010, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[13]  Crystal L. Park,et al.  Making sense of the meaning literature: an integrative review of meaning making and its effects on adjustment to stressful life events. , 2010, Psychological bulletin.

[14]  Joshua A. Hicks,et al.  Positive mood and social relatedness as information about meaning in life , 2009 .

[15]  Patrick E. McKnight,et al.  Purpose in Life as a System that Creates and Sustains Health and Well-Being: An Integrative, Testable Theory , 2009 .

[16]  Joshua A. Hicks,et al.  Detecting and constructing meaning in life events , 2009 .

[17]  R. Baumeister,et al.  Alone and Without Purpose: Life Loses Meaning Following Social Exclusion. , 2009, Journal of experimental social psychology.

[18]  Joshua A. Hicks,et al.  Meaning in Life as a Subjective Judgment and a Lived Experience , 2009 .

[19]  Robert Biswas-Diener,et al.  Please Scroll down for Article the Journal of Positive Psychology Reconsidering Happiness: the Costs of Distinguishing between Hedonics and Eudaimonia Reconsidering Happiness: the Costs of Distinguishing between Hedonics and Eudaimonia , 2022 .

[20]  D. H. Rosen,et al.  Assessment of Existential Meaning and its Longitudinal Relations with Depressive Symptoms , 2008 .

[21]  Stefan E. Schulenberg,et al.  On the Measurement of Meaning: Logotherapy's Empirical Contributions to Humanistic Psychology , 2008 .

[22]  T. Kashdan,et al.  Being good by doing good: Daily eudaimonic activity and well-being , 2008 .

[23]  Roz Dixon,et al.  Ostracism , 2007 .

[24]  Todd B. Kashdan,et al.  Curiosity and pathways to well-being and meaning in life: Traits, states, and everyday behaviors , 2007 .

[25]  N. Krause Longitudinal study of social support and meaning in life. , 2007, Psychology and aging.

[26]  T. Kashdan,et al.  Stability and specificity of meaning in life and life satisfaction over one year , 2007 .

[27]  John B. Nezlek,et al.  Social support as a moderator of day‐to‐day relationships between daily negative events and daily psychological well‐being , 2006 .

[28]  J. Nezlek,et al.  Distinguishing affective and non-affective reactions to daily events. , 2005, Journal of personality.

[29]  M. Steger,et al.  Meaning in Life: One Link in the Chain From Religiousness to Well-Being , 2005 .

[30]  K. Gunthert,et al.  Affective Reactivity to Daily Interpersonal Stressors as a Prospective Predictor of Depressive Symptoms , 2004 .

[31]  N. Allen,et al.  The social risk hypothesis of depressed mood: evolutionary, psychosocial, and neurobiological perspectives. , 2003, Psychological bulletin.

[32]  R. Baumeister,et al.  Social exclusion and the deconstructed state: time perception, meaninglessness, lethargy, lack of emotion, and self-awareness. , 2003, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[33]  J. Berkhof,et al.  Effects of daily events on mood states in major depressive disorder. , 2003, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[34]  J. Nezlek,et al.  Affect- and Self-Based Models of Relationships between Daily Events and Daily Well-Being , 2003, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[35]  John B. Nezlek,et al.  PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN Nezlek, Gable / DAILY EVENTS AND DAILY ADJUSTMENT Depression as a Moderator of Relationships Between Positive Daily Events and Day-to-Day Psychological Adjustment , 2001 .

[36]  John B. Nezlek,et al.  Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin Nezlek / Multilevel Random Coefficient Analyses Multilevel Random Coefficient Analyses of Event-and Interval-contingent Data in Social and Personality Psychology Research , 2022 .

[37]  Kennon M. Sheldon,et al.  What is satisfying about satisfying events? Testing 10 candidate psychological needs. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[38]  Yuk Fai Cheong,et al.  HLM 6: Hierarchical Linear and Nonlinear Modeling , 2000 .

[39]  D. Debats Sources of Meaning: An Investigation of Significant Commitments in Life , 1999 .

[40]  M. H. Davis,et al.  Relationship-specific and global perceptions of social support: associations with well-being and attachment. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[41]  John B. Nezlek,et al.  Personality Moderators of Reactions to Interpersonal Rejection: Depression and Trait Self-Esteem , 1997 .

[42]  Susan Folkman,et al.  Meaning in the Context of Stress and Coping , 1997 .

[43]  R. Baumeister,et al.  The need to belong: desire for interpersonal attachments as a fundamental human motivation. , 1995, Psychological bulletin.

[44]  M. Leary,et al.  Self-esteem as an interpersonal monitor: The sociometer hypothesis. , 1995 .

[45]  R. Baumeister,et al.  How Stories Make Sense of Personal Experiences: Motives that Shape Autobiographical Narratives , 1994 .

[46]  K Chamberlain,et al.  On the relation between meaning in life and psychological well-being. , 1992, British journal of psychology.

[47]  R. Kessler,et al.  Measuring daily events and experiences: decisions for the researcher. , 1991, Journal of personality.

[48]  J. E. HUMBLE,et al.  The meaning of life , 2013, Nature.

[49]  D. Watson,et al.  Development and validation of brief measures of positive and negative affect: the PANAS scales. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[50]  Robert A Emmons Personal strivings: An approach to personality and subjective well-being. , 1986 .

[51]  E. Diener,et al.  Subjective well-being. , 1984, Psychological bulletin.

[52]  S. Wallace The Denial of Death , 1979, Occupational health nursing.

[53]  E. E. Jones,et al.  When Self-Presentation is Constrained by the Target's Knowledge: Consistency and Compensation. , 1978 .

[54]  E. Klinger Meaning and Void: Inner Experience and the Incentives in People’s Lives , 1978 .

[55]  G. Mathews,et al.  Meanings of Life , 1936, The Journal of Religion.

[56]  D. Gilbert,et al.  Still a thrill: Meaning making and the pleasures of uncertainty. , 2013 .

[57]  Matthew J. Lindberg,et al.  The Psychology of Meaning , 2013 .

[58]  M. Macdonald Meaning-in-Life Measures and Development of a Brief Version of the Personal Meaning Profile , 2012 .

[59]  R. Baumeister,et al.  The construction of meaning from life events: Empirical studies of personal narratives. , 2012 .

[60]  J. Nezlek Diary methods for personality and social psychology , 2012 .

[61]  P. Wong The Human Quest for Meaning Theories Research and Applications , 2012 .

[62]  H. S. Sullivan Terror Management Theory: From Genesis to Revelations , 2011 .

[63]  C. R. Snyder,et al.  Oxford handbook of positive psychology, 2nd ed. , 2009 .

[64]  I. Mcgregor,et al.  Personal projects as compensatory convictions: Passionate pursuit and the fugitive self. , 2007 .

[65]  R. Baumeister,et al.  Does social exclusion motivate interpersonal reconnection? Resolving the "porcupine problem". , 2007, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[66]  Joshua A. Hicks,et al.  Positive affect and the experience of meaning in life. , 2006, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[67]  Robert A Emmons Personal goals, life meaning, and virtue: Wellsprings of a positive life. , 2003 .

[68]  Jonathan Haidt,et al.  Flourishing: Positive psychology and the life well-lived. , 2003 .

[69]  E. D. Scannell,et al.  Meaning in life and positive and negative well-being. , 2002 .

[70]  Stephen Wright The meaning of love. , 2001, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).

[71]  E. Deci,et al.  Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being. , 2000, The American psychologist.

[72]  D. Kahneman,et al.  Well-being : the foundations of hedonic psychology , 1999 .

[73]  B. Dykman Integrating cognitive and motivational factors in depression: initial tests of a goal-orientation approach. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[74]  Brian R. Little,et al.  Personal project pursuit: Dimensions and dynamics of personal meaning. , 1998 .

[75]  P. Wong,et al.  The human quest for meaning : a handbook of psychological research and clinical applications , 1998 .

[76]  J. Hokanson,et al.  A comparison of self-esteem lability and low trait self-esteem as vulnerability factors for depression. , 1994, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[77]  Albert Bandura,et al.  REGULATIVE FUNCTION OF PERCEIVED SELF-EFFICACY , 1994 .

[78]  Larry E. Toothaker,et al.  Multiple Regression: Testing and Interpreting Interactions , 1991 .

[79]  John G. Nicholls,et al.  Dimensions of achievement motivation in schoolwork and sport. , 1992 .

[80]  Timothy J. Fogarty,et al.  Case Western Reserve University , 1990 .

[81]  S. Zika,et al.  Measuring meaning in life: An examination of three scales , 1988 .

[82]  R. Almond,et al.  The development of meaning in life. , 1973, Psychiatry.

[83]  T. Kashdan,et al.  Depression and Everyday Social Activity, Belonging, and Well-being Depression and Social Dysfunction , 2022 .