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Impact of psychoeducational content delivered online to a positive psychology aware community
Authors:Carly Haeck  Acacia C. Parks  Stephen M. Schueller
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, 3701 Market St Suite 224, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA;2. Department of Psychology, Hiram College, Hiram, OH, USA;3. Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract:Happiness-increasing interventions demonstrate significant variation in outcomes, suggesting that the people who use them might be as important as the interventions themselves to determine efficacy. In light of this, instructive interventions might not be necessary to increase happiness given a population with knowledge of happiness-increasing strategies. We recruited 270 participants with knowledge of positive psychology to receive six weeks of online psychoeducation. We explored participants’ use of the website, reported use of happiness strategies, and changes in well-being. Those who spent more time on the website reported smaller changes in well-being than those who spent less time on the website. Conversely, those who reported employing more happiness strategies reported greater increases in well-being than those who used fewer strategies. This shows that for those already familiar with positive psychology, information, rather than instruction, might increase well-being. This has implications for studies evaluating the efficacy of happiness-increasing interventions more broadly.
Keywords:happiness  intervention  positive psychology  Internet
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