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The Science of Positive Psychology

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Title: The Science of Positive Psychology


1
The Science of Positive Psychology
  • Christopher Peterson
  • University of Michigan
  • November 7, 2007
  • Peterson, C., Park, N. (in press). Positive
    psychology. In B. J. Sadock, V. A. Sadock, P.
    Ruiz (Eds.), Comprehensive textbook of psychiatry
    (9th ed.). Baltimore Lippincott, Williams,
    Wilkins.

2
(No Transcript)
3
Outline
  • Positive psychology Overview
  • Positive psychology and therapy
  • Examples of positive psychotherapy
  • Case example
  • Conclusions

4
Reframing the Framingham Study
  • Obesity spreads through social networks
  • But so too does non-obesity!
  • The value of positive psychology in reframing the
    human condition
  • Do positive health practices spread as well?

5
1. Positive Psychology Overview
  • The scientific study of what goes right in life
  • Signature premise What is good about life is as
    genuine as what is bad and therefore deserves
    equal attention from psychologists
  • Life entails more than avoiding or undoing
    problems
  • Explanations of the good life must do more than
    reverse accounts of problems

6
A Long Past and a Short History
  • Seligman (1998)
  • Ancestors
  • Athenian philosophers
  • Lao-Tsu and Confucius
  • Witmer
  • Rogers and Maslow
  • Jahoda
  • Empirical research
  • Quality of life and subjective well-being
  • Primary prevention and wellness promotion
  • Agency and self-efficacy
  • Giftedness and multiple intelligences
  • What happened?
  • Positivism got in the way
  • Basic versus applied schism
  • World War II and clinical psychology

7
What is Positive Psychology?
  • Again, positive psychology is an umbrella term
    describing the scientific study of what makes
    life most worth living
  • Positive psychologists concern themselves with
  • Positive experiences
  • Positive traits
  • Positive relationships
  • Positive institutions
  • Positive psychology does not replace
    business-as-usual psychology
  • Positive psychology intends to complement and
    extend a problem-focused psychology

8
Questions, Quarrels, Quibbles and Necessary
Qualifications
  • Assumption that people are brittle and broken
  • Skepticism about relentless happiness and
    optimism
  • Dumbed-down popularizations
  • Regardless, positive psychology is not
    indifferent to human suffering

9
A Real Quick Summary of Positive Psychology What
Do We Know?
  • Most people are happy
  • The important correlates of happiness are social
    in nature
  • Happiness is causal not epiphenomenal
  • Happiness can be increased
  • People are terrible at emotional forecasting
  • Happiness leads to physical well-being

10
(continued)
  • Positive emotions and negative emotions are
    distinct
  • Positive emotions broaden and build peoples
    psychological and behavioral repertoires
  • Positive emotions undo the physiological effects
    of negative emotions
  • Engagement matters
  • Good days have common features
  • A rosy view of matters is associated with
    physical, psychological, and social well-being

11
(continued)
  • Most people are resilient
  • Virtue is more than its own reward
  • Meaning and purpose matter
  • Other people matter
  • Religion matters
  • Money makes an ever diminishing contribution to
    happiness
  • Work matters
  • Eudaimonia trumps hedonism
  • The heart matters more than the head
  • Happiness, strengths of character, and good
    social relationships are buffers against the
    damaging effects of stressful life events
  • Positive institutions have common features

12
(continued)
  • The good life can be taughtmaybe

13
2. Positive Psychology and Therapy
  • In the beginning
  • Natural homes for positive psychology
  • The role of positive psychology in the clinic
  • Remediation
  • Rehabilitation
  • Relapse prevention
  • Maintenance
  • Promotion
  • No consensual theory
  • Goals
  • Assessments
  • Techniques
  • And what about positive health psychology?

14
Positive Psychologys Vision of the Good Life
  • More positive feelings than negative feelings
  • Satisfaction with life as it has been lived
  • Identification and use of talents and strengths
    on an ongoing basis
  • Engagement in activities
  • Contributing member of a social community
  • Meaning and purpose
  • Health and safety

15
Positive Psychology Measures
  • Positive Affect
  • e.g., Positive and Negative Affect Schedule
    (PANAS)
  • e.g., Profile of Mood States (POMS)
  • Happiness
  • e.g., Authentic Happiness Inventory (AHI)
  • e.g., Orientations to Happiness Scale Life
    Satisfaction
  • e.g., Satisfaction with Life Scale
  • e.g., Marital Satisfaction
  • e.g., Work Satisfaction
  • e.g., Leisure Satisfaction
  • Positive Traits
  • e.g., Values in Action Inventory of Strengths
    (VIA)
  • e.g., Ryff and Singers Psychological Well-Being
    Scales
  • e.g., Search Institutes Developmental Assets
    for youth

16
(continued)
  • Values
  • e.g., Values Inventories of Research, Schwartz,
    Scott, and others
  • Interests
  • e.g., Strong-Campbell Vocational Interest Blank
    (SVIB)
  • Abilities
  • e.g., multiple intelligences
  • Social Support and Attachment
  • e.g., The Multidimensional Scale of Perceived
    Social Support
  • e.g.., Adult Attachment Style Questionnaire

17
Exercise A Positive Intake
18
Positive Psychology Techniques
  • Exercises to increase positive feelings
  • e.g., performing acts of kindness
  • e.g., savoring
  • e.g., writing a gratitude letter
  • Exercises to decrease negative feelings
  • e.g., turning ones head to see the positive
  • e.g., writing about traumatic events
  • Exercises to increase life satisfaction
  • e.g., counting ones blessings
  • e.g., performing acts of kindness
  • Exercises to develop talents and strengths
  • e.g., using talents and/or signature strengths of
    character in novel ways

19
(continued)
  • Exercises to increase engagement
  • e.g., finding a challenging hobby
  • Exercises to increase social connectedness
  • e.g., being a good teammate
  • e.g., active-constructive responding
  • Exercises to increase meaning and purpose
  • e.g., performing secret good deeds
  • e.g., writing ones own legacy
  • e.g., working for a valued institution
  • Exercises to increase health and safety
  • e.g., worrying about the right things

20
What is Positive Psychotherapy?
  • Goal is enhanced happiness, life satisfaction,
    fulfillment, productivitycomponents of positive
    psychologys vision of the good life
  • So what about
  • European spa tradition?
  • Human potential movement?
  • After-school programs?
  • Character education?
  • Wilderness adventures?
  • Worksite wellness programs?
  • Motivational interviewing?
  • Life coaching?
  • Appreciative Inquiry?
  • Sunday School?
  • Disney Channel?

21
Therapeutic Alliance
  • Focus here is on approaches characterized by an
    explicit therapeutic alliance between the
    positive psychologist and the client
  • Collaboration
  • Affective bond
  • Agreement
  • In defining positive psychotherapy, the
    relational context of the intervention is
    critical

22
A Taxonomy of Interventions
23
3. Examples of Positive Psychotherapy
  • Personal Happiness Program
  • Internet Positive Psychology Interventions
  • Positive Psychotherapy
  • Quality of Life Therapy
  • Positive Behavioral Support
  • Hope Therapy
  • Well-Being Therapy
  • Penn Resiliency Program
  • Action and Commitment Therapy
  • Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy
  • Positive Therapy
  • Day Rearranging

24
4. Case Example
  • Problem
  • Positive psychology reconceptualization
  • Identification of strengths
  • Use of strengths to recraft tasks
  • Resolution

25
5. Conclusions
  • Family resemblance
  • Primary goal to enhance well-being and optimal
    functioning
  • Secondary goal to reduce anxiety or depression
  • Cognitive-behavioral
  • Short-term structured therapies for individual or
    small groups
  • Out-of-sessions exercises and assignments
  • Journals
  • Ongoing assessment
  • Anti-medical model
  • Empirical support accumulating

26
Remaining Questions
  • Comparison to business-as-usual therapies?
  • Boundary conditions?
  • What about weaknesses?
  • How light-handed is positive therapy?
  • Why do we live as we do?

27
Any Final Matters to Clean Up?
28
Thank You
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