What makes us happy?
Findings
Momentary happiness reflects NOT how well things are going, BUT instead whether things are going BETTER than Expected. This includes positive and negative expectations, even in the absence of outcomes. Rewards received many trials ago have no influence on current happiness in the task. Recent rewards affected ongoing reactive happiness rating.
Overall effect of expectations on happiness is negative. i.e. positive expectations effectively reduce the overall emotional impact of trials with positive outcomes.Negative expectations, reduce the overall emotional impact of trials with negative outcomes. ( = if expecting negative outcome, then prepare with more negative expectations to reduce distress later). Lowering expectations can increase the probability of positive outcome . ( used in sports= ‘underdog’ approach).However lowering expectations reduce well-being before an outcome arrives.
A sufficiently negative expectation can help create an overall positive emotional impact from a negative event. ( =predict a longer delay ( flight/ parcels/appointments) and anything less than that reduce the distress. Remembered feelings depend most on how experiences were at the END. (= painful medical procedures are remembered as less unpleasant when they end with a less painful period).
Phasic dopamine release in striatum is linked to momentary happiness.
Conclusions:
Momentary happiness is a result of the combined influence of recent reward expectations and prediction errors arising from those expectations.
Comments:
It is not what actually happens that determine how you feel, it is what happened in relation to your expectation that matters.