Matt Killingsworth: Want to be happier? Stay in the moment
Matt Killingsworth: Želite biti sretniji? Ostanite u trenutku
Researcher Matt Killingsworth designs studies that gather data on happiness. One takeaway? "A Wandering Mind Is an Unhappy Mind." Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
našeg života znatno poboljšali,
takve rasprave ostaju neriješene.
ima mogućnost odgovoriti na ovo pitanje.
nekoliko godina, došlo je do eksplozije
i bračnog statusa utječu na sreću.
kako proučavati ljudsku sreću
Zove se trackyourhappiness.org
ljudske sreće u stvarnom vremenu.
šaljem ljudima poruke
i dolaze iz više od 80 zemalja.
imam s vama danas htio bih
Omogućuje nam da učimo,
vrsta ili životinja to ne može.
na sadašnjost. ''Budi ovdje sada.''
moramo biti potpuno
promijeniti fizičku stvarnost
možemo otići bilo kamo.
na neko mjesto sretnije od onoga
povećamo svoju sreću.
Zapamtite, odgovori dolaze
u stvarnim životima.
jedenja, rada i gledanja televizije?
usredotočen sam samo na svoj zadatak -
smatra se lutanjem uma.
da su te dvije stvari povezane.
jest da vrijeme ide naprijed,
imamo mnogo odgovora od svake osobe
nekoliko trenutaka kasnije,
zbog sanjarenja osjećaju nesretnima.
rekao ponešto o lutanju uma,
otkriti o važnim uzrocima sreće.
koja neće biti samo bogatija
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Matt Killingsworth - Happiness researcherResearcher Matt Killingsworth designs studies that gather data on happiness. One takeaway? "A Wandering Mind Is an Unhappy Mind."
Why you should listen
While doing his PhD research with Dan Gilbert at Harvard, Matt Killingsworth invented a nifty tool for investigating happiness: an iPhone app called Track Your Happiness that captured feelings in real time. (Basically, it pings you at random times and asks: How are you feeling right now, and what are you doing?) Data captured from the study became the landmark paper "A Wandering Mind Is an Unhappy Mind" (PDF).
As an undergrad, Killingsworth studied economics and engineering, and worked for a few years as a software product manager -- an experience during which, he says, "I began to question my assumptions about what defined success for an individual, an organization, or a society." He's now a Robert Wood Johnson Health and Society Scholar examining such topics as "the relationship between happiness and the content of everyday experiences, the percentage of everyday experiences that are intrinsically valuable, and the degree of congruence between the causes of momentary happiness and of one’s overall satisfaction with life."
Matt Killingsworth | Speaker | TED.com