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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Dec 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Exp Psychol Gen. 2015 Sep 7;144(6):1053–1062. doi: 10.1037/xge0000108

Table 1.

Sample characteristics and descriptive statistics.

Total Sample United States Germany Russia East Asia

Total Russia Tomsk Moscow Total East Asia Japan Taiwan
Sample size (n) 786 307 91 184 105 79 204 109 95
Age 21.89 (6.89) 19.37 (1.40) 22.29 (4.37) 21.24 (3.10) 21.16 (3.62) 21.34 (2.21) 26.15 (11.65) 19.87 (2.14) 33.6 (13.76)
Gender (% female) 67.8% 71.3% 76.4% 79.3% 79.0% 79.7% 47.1% 33.0% 63.2%

Motivation to pursue happiness 3.87 (1.12) 3.60 (0.96) 3.47 (1.06) 4.12 (1.14) 4.18 (1.14) 4.04 (1.14) 4.22 (1.16) 3.63 (1.06) 4.90 (0.86)
Socially-engaged definitions of happiness 4.39 (0.53) 4.53 (0.39) 4.24 (.55) 4.39 (0.54) 4.46 (0.50) 4.28 (0.57) 4.19 (0.63) 4.01 (0.70) 4.39 (0.47)
Well-being 0 (0.79) 0.42 (0.70) −0.41 (.79) −0.07 (0.63) −0.01 (.64) −0.14 (.61) −0.39 (0.72) −0.77 (0.54) 0.05 (0.64)

Note. Motivation to pursue happiness is on a scale of 1–7. Socially-engaged definitions of happiness is on a scale of 1–5. Well-being is a composite of four measures (Satisfaction with Life, Ryff Scales of Psychological Well-being, Hedonic Balance, Beck Depression Inventory) that were each z-scored (with mean = 0 and SD = 1) and averaged together (see methods for more details). Unless otherwise noted, values represent means with standard deviations in parentheses. Means were not compared across cultures because measurement invariance analyses indicated that these mean-level comparisons may not reflect meaningful cultural differences (see preliminary analysis section for more details).