
Happy People Read/Socialize, Unhappy People Watch TV, According To Study
November 17, 2008
A new study by sociologists at the University of Maryland concludes that unhappy
people watch more TV, while people who describe themselves as very happy spend
more time reading and socializing. The study appears in the December issue of
the journal Social Indicators Research.
Analyzing 30-years worth of national data from time-use studies and a continuing
series of social attitude surveys, the Maryland researchers report that spending
time watching television may contribute to viewers' happiness in the moment,
with less positive effects in the long run.
"TV doesn't really seem to satisfy people over the long haul the way that
social involvement or reading a newspaper does," says University of
Maryland sociologist John P. Robinson, the study co-author and a pioneer in
time-use studies. "It's more passive and may provide escape - especially
when the news is as depressing as the economy itself. The data suggest to us
that the TV habit may offer short-run pleasure at the expense of long-term
malaise."
TV VIEWING DURING A FINANCIAL CRISIS
Based on data from time use surveys, Robinson projects that TV viewing might
increase significantly as the economy worsens in the next few months and years.
"Through good and bad economic times, our diary studies, have consistently
found that work is the major activity correlate of higher TV viewing
hours," Robinson says. "As people have progressively more time on
their hands, viewing hours increase."
But Robinson cautions that some of that extra time also might be spent sleeping.
"As working and viewing hours increase, so do sleep hours," he says.
"Sleep could be the second major beneficiary of job loss or reduced working
hours."
STUDY FINDINGS AND DATA
In their new study, Robinson and his co-author, University of Maryland
sociologist Steven Martin, set out to learn more about the activities that
contributed to happiness in people's lives. They analyzed two sets of data
spanning nearly 30 years (1975-2006) gathered from nearly 30,000 adults:
|
A series of time-use studies that asked people to fill out diaries for a 24-hour period and to indicate how pleasurable they found each activity;
| General Social Survey attitude studies, which Robinson calls the national premier source for monitoring changes in public attitudes - in-depth surveys that over the years consistently asked subjects how happy they feel, how they spend their time among a number of other questions. |
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