**<h4> Project Overview </h4>**
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What does it mean to be happy? The vast majority of cross-cultural studies on happiness have employed a Western-origin, or “WEIRD” measure of happiness that conceptualizes well-being as a personally independent, high-arousal emotion. However, research from Eastern cultures, particularly Japan, conceptualizes happiness as including an interpersonal aspect that emphasizes harmony and connectedness to others.
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Following a combined emic-etic approach (Cheung, van de Vijver & Leong, 2011), we assessed the cross-cultural applicability a measure of independent happiness developed in the US (Subjective Happiness Scale; Lyubomirsky & Lepper, 1999) and a measure of interdependent happiness developed in Japan (Interdependent Happiness Scale; Hitokoto & Uchida, 2014), gathering data in 63 countries representing 7 sociocultural regions.
Link to final published manuscript: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0242718
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**<h5> The International Situations Project </h5>**
Data from this project come from the International Situations Project, a large-scale cross-cultural study assessing situational experience, daily behavior and individual differences including personality, dispositional optimism, happiness, narcissism, religiosity, among others. More information about this project is available here: osf.io/yv2nq