Subjective well-being and mortality revisited: Differential effects of cognitive and emotional facets of well-being on mortality.
Maja Wiest(German Centre of Gerontology), Susanne Wurm(German Centre of Gerontology), Noah Webster(University of Michigan), Benjamin Schüz(University of Tasmania)
Cited by 125
Related Papers
Action planning and coping planning for long-term lifestyle change: theory and assessment
|European Journal of Social Psychology|2005|1k
I believe, therefore I achieve (and vice versa): A meta-analytic cross-lagged panel analysis of self-efficacy and academic performance
|Learning and Individual Differences|2017|424
Adoption and maintenance of four health behaviors: Theory-guided longitudinal studies on dental flossing, seat belt use, dietary behavior, and physical activity
|Annals of Behavioral Medicine|2007|369
Benefits of Having Friends in Older Ages: Differential Effects of Informal Social Activities on Well-Being in Middle-Aged and Older Adults
|The Journals of Gerontology Series B|2013|337
How do negative self-perceptions of aging become a self-fulfilling prophecy?
|Psychology and Aging|2013|239