-
Cancer has adverse effects on patient’s quality of life. As such, measuring quality of life (QoL) has become an integral part of psycho-oncological health care. Because adolescent and young adult patients have different needs in contrast to children and older cancer patients, instruments for adequately measuring QoL of cancer survivors in this age range are essential. As there is not a corresponding ...
In:
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
16 (2018), 1, 4
| Diana Richter, Anja Mehnert, Florian Schepper, Katja Leuteritz, Crystal Park, Jochen Ernst
-
The SOEP Group currently is preparing in addition to increasing the size of the core SOEP, to establish a new Innovation Sample (SOEP-IS). This will be established for the period 2012 to 2017 (with a cumulative number of presumably N=5,000 households). Now, in the year 2012, a new subsample is being added for SOEP IS that will also replace the previous SOEP pretest sample. Starting with the 2013 survey, ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2012,
(SOEPpapers 463)
| David Richter, Jürgen Schupp
-
In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch
135 (2015), 3, 389-399
| David Richter, Jürgen Schupp
-
Major nuclear accidents as recently in Fukushima set nuclear power plant security at the top of the public agenda. Using data of the German Socio-Economic Panel we analyze the effects of the Fukushima accident and a subsequent government decision on nuclear power phase-out on several measures of subjective perception in Germany. In the light of current political debates about the strategic orientation ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2013,
(SOEPpapers 590)
| Felix Richter, Malte Steenbeck, Markus Wilhelm
-
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
-
Walferdange:
CEPS/INSTEAD,
1995,
(Document No. 7)
| Marlis Riebschläger
-
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
-
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
-
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
-
2014,
| Maximilian Riedl