Feelings 'ratings' are highly predictive of future behaviour - research

October 05, 2022

The research, led by Dr Caspar Kaiser of Oxford’s Wellbeing Research Centre and the University's Institute for New Economic Thinking, published this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, used data from three quarters of a million people across three countries. Dr Kaiser and Professor Andrew Oswald, from the University of Warwick, compared self-reported feelings integers - for example, where individuals were asked to rate their satisfaction on a scale of 0 to 10 – to later ‘get-me-out-of-here’ actions. The research shows feelings integers or ratings are generally of greater predictive power than combined socioeconomic variablesWhen individuals choose to leave their current setting, it is an unambiguous signal of human dissatisfaction with the status quo. For the purposes of this study, the authors looked at four types of get-me-out-of-here action: moving dwellings, changing intimate partners, leaving jobs, and hospital visits. Their research shows feelings integers or ratings are generally of greater predictive power than combined socioeconomic variables, including household income, marital status, education and number of children, among others.

The source of this news is from University of Oxford