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Eudaimonia and Hedonia Through Enrichment: Pathways to Happiness

Palgrave Studies in Indian Management, 2019
There is a need to further explore the distinctions between two traditions of well-being research: hedonia and eudaimonia. We do this by looking at hedonia, operationalized as subjective well-being (SWB), and eudaimonia, operationalized as flourishing or psychological well-being (PWB), and exploring the pathways through work-family enrichment (WFE). We
Rajesh Premchandran   +1 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Hedonia, Eudaimonia, and Meaning: Me Versus Us; Fleeting Versus Enduring

International Handbooks of Quality-of-life, 2016
Psychology’s recent interest in the philosophical debate regarding hedonia and eudaimonia has added richness to conceptualizations of flourishing, but this chapter argues that a more psychological model of hedonia and eudaimonia would free the field from “conceptual confusion” and stimulate new research approaches. This chapter presents a model wherein
Michael F Steger
exaly   +2 more sources

Transmitter v. Hedonia

Ethics and Behavior, 1996
exaly   +2 more sources

Hedonia, eudaimonia, and well-being: an introduction

Journal of Happiness Studies, 2006
Research on well-being can be thought of as falling into two traditions. In one—the hedonistic tradition—the focus is on happiness, generally defined as the presence of positive affect and the absence of negative affect. In the other—the eudaimonic tradition—the focus is on living life in a full and deeply satisfying way.
Deci, Edward L., Ryan, Richard Michael
openaire   +3 more sources

An Integrated Look at Well-Being: Topological Clustering of Combinations and Correlates of Hedonia and Eudaimonia

Journal of Happiness Studies, 2020
Subjective measures of well-being are increasingly seen by scholars and policy makers as valuable tools to assess quality of life. Hedonic accounts focus on people's experience of life in positive ways while eudaimonic accounts are concerned with realization of personal potential.
Pancheva, M. G.   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Defining and Operationalizing Eight Forms of Eudaimonia and Hedonia and Assessing Tourism-Specific Context-Dependency

Journal of Travel Research, 2022
The development of wellbeing during a vacation and immediately afterward is well understood. It remains unclear, however, how eudaimonia and hedonia differ across typical home and vacation contexts. Given that eudaimonia and hedonia drive behavior, understanding contextual differences can guide the development of targeted behavioral change ...
Csilla Demeter   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Individual differences in sucrose consumption in the rat: motivational and neurochemical correlates of hedonia

Psychopharmacology, 2001
Rats exhibit marked individual differences in consumption of freely available sucrose; however, the underlying mechanism(s) contributing to such interindividual differences remain unclear.The current study examined whether: 1) motivational differences (as reflected by the degree of operant output to procure sucrose reward) underlie variability in sugar
K, Brennan   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Eudaimonia and Hedonia in the Design and Evaluation of a Cooperative Game for Psychosocial Well-Being

Human–Computer Interaction, 2019
An extended design and evaluation framework of eudaimonia (personal growth, expressiveness) and hedonia (pleasure, comfort) was applied to a cooperative game for older adults who rely on power mobi...
Katie Seaborn   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

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