All Stories

  1. Childhood sleep duration and lifelong mortality risk.
  2. A multidimensional approach to measuring well-being in students: Application of the PERMA framework
  3. Integrating prospective longitudinal data: Modeling personality and health in the Terman Life Cycle and Hawaii Longitudinal Studies.
  4. Personality, Well-Being, and Health*
  5. Assessing Employee Wellbeing in Schools Using a Multifaceted Approach: Associations with Physical Health, Life Satisfaction, and Professional Thriving
  6. From “Sooo excited!!!” to “So proud”: Using language to study development.
  7. A new life-span approach to conscientiousness and health: Combining the pieces of the causal puzzle.
  8. Do as you’re told! Facets of agreeableness and early adult outcomes for inner-city boys
  9. Lifelong Pathways to Longevity: Personality, Relationships, Flourishing, and Health
  10. Personality, Gender, and Age in the Language of Social Media: The Open-Vocabulary Approach
  11. Health Consequences of Personality and Education: Developmental Transactions Across the Life Span
  12. A meta-analysis of the convergent validity of self-control measures
  13. Personality and Differences in Health and Longevity
  14. Doing the Right Thing: Measuring Well-Being for Public Policy
  15. Personality and Pathways of Influence on Physical Health
  16. Personality and Health, Subjective Well‐Being, and Longevity
  17. Affect Variability and Longevity in Late Life
  18. Early educational milestones as predictors of lifelong academic achievement, midlife adjustment, and longevity
  19. Conscientiousness, Career Success, and Longevity: A Lifespan Analysis
  20. Do conscientious individuals live longer? A quantitative review.
  21. Health benefits: Meta-analytically determining the impact of well-being on objective health outcomes
  22. Preliminary Look Into Personal Definitions of Health
  23. Health, Happiness, and Longevity: Differential Relations to Neuroticism
  24. Components of Healthy Aging as Predictors of Mortality Risk
  25. Why do some people thrive while others succumb to disease and stagnation?