Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Relations Among Maternal Life Satisfaction, Shared Activities, and Child Well-Being

    Maternal well-being is assumed to be associated with well-being of individual family members, optimal parenting practices, and positive developmental outcomes for children. The objective of this study was to examine the interplay between maternal well-being, parent-child activities, and the well-being of 5 to 7-year old children. In a sample of N = 291 mother-child dyads, maternal life satisfaction, ...

    In: Frontiers in Psychology 9 (2018), 739, | Nina Richter, Rebecca Bondü, C. Katharina Spieß, Gert G. Wagner, Gisela Trommsdorff
  • A Review of Weighting Methods Employed by Panel Studies Included in the PACO Project

    Walferdange: CEPS/INSTEAD, 1995,
    (Document No. 7)
    | Marlis Riebschläger
  • Seeking Pleasure and Seeking Pain: Differences in Prohedonic and Contra-Hedonic Motivation From Adolescence to Old Age

    Using a mobile-phone-based experience-sampling technology in a sample of 378 individuals ranging from 14 to 86 years of age, we investigated age differences in how people want to influence their feelings in their daily lives. Contra-hedonic motivations of wanting either to maintain or enhance negative affect or to dampen positive affect were most prevalent in adolescence, whereas prohedonic motivations ...

    In: Psychological Science 20 (2009), 12, 1529-1535 | Michaela Riediger, Florian Schmiedek, Gert G. Wagner, Ulman Lindenberger
  • Outside of the Laboratory: Associations of Working-Memory Performance With Psychological and Physiological Arousal Vary With Age

    We investigated age differences in associations among self-reported experiences of tense and energetic arousal, physiological activation indicated by heart rate, and working-memory performance in everyday life. The sample comprised 92 participants aged 14–83 years. Data were collected for 24 hr while participants pursued their normal daily routines. Participants wore an ambulatory biomonitoring system ...

    In: Psychology and Aging 29 (2014), 1, 103-114 | Michaela Riediger, Cornelia Wrzus, Kathrin Klipker, Viktor Müller, Florian Schmiedek, Gert G. Wagner
  • Is seeking bad mood cognitively demanding? Contra-hedonic orientation and working-memory capacity in everyday life

    Hedonism, or wanting to feel good, is central to human motivation. At times, however, people also seek to maintain or enhance negative affect or to dampen positive affect, and this can be instrumental for the later attainment of their goals. Here, we investigate the assumption that such contra-hedonic orientation is cognitively more demanding than prohedonic orientation, above and beyond the effects ...

    In: Emotion 11 (2011), 3, 656-665 | Michaela Riediger, Cornelia Wrzus, Florian Schmiedek, Gert G. Wagner, Ulman Lindenberger
  • Three Essays on Job Loss Fears and Offshoring (Thesis)

    2014, | Maximilian Riedl
  • Inequality and mobility of household incomes in Europe: evidence from the ECHP

    In this article we want to shed light on two aspects of income mobility: relative total income mobility using the estimator by Fields and Ok (1999) and equalization of long-run incomes measured by the index of Fields (2009). The cross country comparison shows a negative relationship between total relative mobility and long-run income equalization, this result is contrary to the intuition given by Shorrocks ...

    In: Applied Economics 44 (2011), 3, 279-288 | Gerhard Riener
  • The stature of the self-employed and its relation with earnings and satisfaction

    Taller individuals have on average a higher socio-economic status than shorter individuals. In countries where entrepreneurs have high social status, we may therefore expect that entrepreneurs are taller than wage workers. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (2002–2012), we find that a 1 cm increase in an individual's height raises the probability of being self-employed (the most common ...

    In: Economics & Human Biology 17 (2015), April 2015, 59-74 | Cornelius A. Rietveld, Jolanda Hessels, Peter van der Zwan
  • It's All About Gains: Risk Preferences in Problem Gambling

    Problem gambling is a serious socioeconomic problem involving high individual and social costs. In this article, we study risk preferences of problem gamblers including their risk attitudes in the gain and loss domains, their weighting of probabilities, and their degree of loss aversion. Our findings indicate that problem gamblers are systematically more risk taking and less sensitive toward changes ...

    In: Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 147 (2018), 8, 1241-1255 | Patrick Ring, Catharina Probst, Levent Neyse, Stephan Wolff, Christian Kaernbach, Thilo van Eimeren, Colin F. Camerer, Ulrich Schmidt
  • Increasing inequalities in Germany: Older people´s employment lives and income conditions since the mid-1980s

    In: Hans-Peter Blossfeld, Sandra Buchholz, Karin Kurz , Aging Populations, Globalization and the Labour Market: Comparing Late Working Life and Retirement in Modern Societies
    Cheltenham, Northampton: Edward Elgar
    35-64
    | Annika Rinklake, Sandra Buchholz
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