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Dive into the research topics where Iolanda Costa Galinha is active.

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Featured researches published by Iolanda Costa Galinha.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2013

Concepts of Happiness Across Time and Cultures

Shigehiro Oishi; Jesse Graham; Selin Kesebir; Iolanda Costa Galinha

We explored cultural and historical variations in concepts of happiness. First, we analyzed the definitions of happiness in dictionaries from 30 nations to understand cultural similarities and differences in happiness concepts. Second, we analyzed the definition of happiness in Webster’s dictionaries from 1850 to the present day to understand historical changes in American English. Third, we coded the State of the Union addresses given by U.S. presidents from 1790 to 2010. Finally, we investigated the appearance of the phrases happy nation versus happy person in Google’s Ngram Viewer from 1800 to 2008. Across cultures and time, happiness was most frequently defined as good luck and favorable external conditions. However, in American English, this definition was replaced by definitions focused on favorable internal feeling states. Our findings highlight the value of a historical perspective in the study of psychological concepts.


Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology | 2013

The Role of Personality Traits, Attachment Style, and Satisfaction With Relationships in the Subjective Well-Being of Americans, Portuguese, and Mozambicans

Iolanda Costa Galinha; Shigehiro Oishi; Cícero Roberto Pereira; Derrick Wirtz; Francisco Esteves

Personality traits, attachment security, and satisfaction with relationships are each important predictors of subjective well-being (SWB). However, no studies have included these predictors together to analyze the unique contribution of each to SWB. Furthermore, most studies are empirically based in Western/industrialized societies, and few studies include African countries. This article addresses the unique contribution of extroversion, neuroticism, attachment security, and satisfaction with relationships to SWB across three samples of 1,574 university students: 497 from North Carolina (United States of America), 544 from Maputo (Mozambique), and 533 from Lisbon (Portugal). Structural equation modeling analysis showed that in the American sample, emotional stability was a more important predictor of global SWB than satisfaction with relationships. In the Mozambican sample, satisfaction with relationships was far more important as a predictor of SWB than emotional stability. In the Portuguese sample, emotional stability and satisfaction with relationships were equally important predictors of SWB. The main difference between the three samples was the contribution of satisfaction with relationships to SWB. Similarities between the three samples include the low or nonsignificant contributions of extroversion and attachment to SWB, above and beyond the contribution of satisfaction with relationships and neuroticism, suggesting they may be sharing variance in the prediction of SWB.


Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology | 2016

Cross-Cultural Comparison of Personality Traits, Attachment Security, and Satisfaction With Relationships as Predictors of Subjective Well-Being in India, Sweden, and the United States:

Iolanda Costa Galinha; Miguel Ángel García-Martín; Shigehiro Oishi; Derrick Wirtz; Francisco Esteves

Personality traits like Neuroticism and Extroversion, Satisfaction With Relationships, and Attachment Security are among the most important predictors of subjective well-being (SWB). However, the relative contribution of these predictors to SWB is seldom tested, and even more rarely tested cross-culturally. In this study, we replicate and extend Galinha, Oishi, Pereira, Wirtz, and Esteves, aiming to identify the strongest predictors of SWB, and in what way that contribution is universal or culture-specific, across such collectivist-individualist countries as India, Sweden, and the United States (N = 1,622). Structural equation modeling showed that Satisfaction With Relationships is a stronger predictor of SWB in India, while Neuroticism is a stronger predictor of SWB in Sweden and the United States, results consistent with prior Portuguese and Mozambican samples. These findings suggest that Satisfaction With Relationships is probably a stronger predictor of SWB in more collectivistic and less developed countries, while low Neuroticism is a stronger predictor of SWB in more individualistic and highly developed countries. Across all samples, Attachment Security and Extroversion showed very weak or nonsignificant effects on SWB above the contribution of Neuroticism and Satisfaction With Relationships, consistent with prior results. Neuroticism significantly mediated the relationship between Attachment Security, SWB, and Satisfaction With Relationships.


Psychology, community & health | 2018

Experimental Study of the Impact of Group Singing in Senior’s Subjective Well-being

Anabela Pires; Iolanda Costa Galinha; Afonso de Herédia

Objective: To evaluate the impact of the participation in a singing program in the subjective well-being (SWB) of seniors. Method: This study, with experimental methodology, used structured measures on the affective and cognitive dimensions of SWB (Positive Affect and Negative Affect – PANAS and Satisfaction with Life SWLS) to test the impact of a short singing program (10 sessions, during four weeks), on seniors attending a day care facility. Thirty seniors (aged between 61 and 92 years old) accepted to participate in the singing program and were randomly assigned into two groups (experimental and control): 26 completed the intervention (four men, 15.3%; 22 women, 84.6%, M = 75 years of age). Results: There was a significant decrease in negative affect in the experimental group after the intervention, which was significantly lower compared to the control group. However, this effect was not sustained at follow-up measurement, eight weeks after intervention. A qualitative analysis of the perception of individuals about their participation in the program showed gains in social support and interaction between participants, in the expression of positive emotions and in knowledge acquisition. Conclusion: The results suggest that singing groups programs may promote SWB variables.


International Journal of Wellbeing | 2012

Cognitive, affective and contextual predictors of subjective wellbeing

Iolanda Costa Galinha; José Luís Pais-Ribeiro


Applied Research in Quality of Life | 2008

The Structure and Stability of Subjective Well-Being: a Structure Equation Modelling Analysis

Iolanda Costa Galinha; José Luís Pais-Ribeiro


Journal of Research in Personality | 2014

Are maximizers unhappier than satisficers? A comparison between Japan and the USA

Shigehiro Oishi; Yoshiro Tsutsui; Casey Eggleston; Iolanda Costa Galinha


Social Indicators Research | 2014

Adult Attachment, Love Styles, Relationship Experiences and Subjective Well-Being: Cross-Cultural and Gender Comparison between Americans, Portuguese, and Mozambicans

Iolanda Costa Galinha; Shigehiro Oishi; Cícero Roberto Pereira; Derrick Wirtz; Francisco Esteves


Psicologica | 2014

Versão reduzida da escala portuguesa de afeto positivo e negativo - PANAS-VRP: Análise fatorial confirmatória e invariância temporal

Iolanda Costa Galinha; Cícero Roberto Pereira; Francisco Esteves


Psicologia-reflexao E Critica | 2013

Confirmatory factor analysis and temporal invariance of the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS)

Iolanda Costa Galinha; Cícero Roberto Pereira; Francisco Esteves

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Derrick Wirtz

East Carolina University

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Cícero Roberto Pereira

Federal University of Paraíba

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Afonso de Herédia

Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa

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Anabela Pires

Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa

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