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Irrational Happiness Beliefs Scale: Development and Initial Validation

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-03-05, 10:47 authored by Murat Yildirim, John Maltby
This study sought to develop a new scale of irrational happiness beliefs (IHB) and test its reliability and validity across two British samples. The participants were subjected toa series of happiness, rationality, irrationality, subjective and psychological well-being measures. The exploratory (n = 207) and confirmatory factor analyses (n = 157) suggested that the IHB scale was unidimensional with three items demonstrating a goodinternal consistency reliability estimate. The IHB also showed significant positive correlations with measures of valuing happiness, negative affect, perceived stress and irrational thinking and that significant negative correlations with measures of satisfaction with life, subjective happiness, positive affect, psychological well-being and rational thinking. Additionally, the IHB scale was found to be discriminated from the valuing happiness measure. The results thus suggest that the IHB is a valid and reliable measure that can be used to assess one’s irrational happiness beliefs and that can readily be placed within wider psychology by contributing to individual well-being.

History

Citation

Int J Ment Health Addiction (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11469-021-00513-2

Author affiliation

Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, College of Life Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction

Publisher

Springer

issn

1557-1874

Acceptance date

2021-02-26

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-03-11

Language

en

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