This is the VOA Special English HEALTH
REPORT.
What makes people happier: money or
having happy friends and neighbors? Researchers from Harvard University and the
University of California, San Diego, have found an answer as part of a study.
Nicholas Christakis and James Fowler
based the study on the emotional health of almost five thousand people. They
used information gathered over a period of twenty years, until two
thousand three, in the Framingham Heart Study. That study began sixty years ago
in Framingham, Massachusetts, to learn more about the risks of heart attack and
stroke.
The new study found that friends of
happy people had a greater chance of being happy themselves. And the smaller
the physical distance between friends, the larger the effect they had on each
other's happiness.
For example, a person was twenty
percent more likely to feel happy if a friend living within one and a half
kilometers was also happy. Having a happy neighbor who lived next door
increased an individual's chance of being happy by thirty-four percent. The
effects of friends' happiness lasted for up to a year.
The researchers found that happiness
really is contagious. Sadness also spread among friends, but not as much as
happiness.
People removed by as much as three
degrees of separation still had an effect on a person's happiness. Three
degrees of separation means the friend of a friend of a friend.
The study showed that having an
extra five thousand dollars increased a person's chances of becoming happier by
about two percent. But the researchers found that the influence of a friend of
a friend of a friend can be greater than that.
Another finding is that people who
are married or work together do not have as much of an effect on happiness as
friends do.
The findings appeared in the British
Medical Journal. The National Institute on Aging in the United States helped
pay for the study.
The study is described as the first
to demonstrate the indirect spread of happiness. In other words, that your
emotions can be affected by someone you do not directly know.
Earlier studies by the two
researchers described the effects of social networks on obesity and efforts to
stop smoking. The new study shows that happiness spreads through social
networks like an emotional virus -- a virus people would be happy to catch.
1.
Present tense
1.
The
new study shows that happiness spreads through social networks like an
emotional virus
2.
Past tense
1.
They
used information gathered over a period of twenty year
2.
That
study began sixty years ago in Framingham, Massachusetts, to learn more about
the risks of heart attack and stroke.
3.
The
new study found that friends of happy people had a greater chance of being
happy themselves
4.
People
removed by as much as three degrees of separation still had an effect on a
person's happiness
5.
The
study showed that having an extra five thousand dollars increased a person's
chances of becoming happier by about two percent
6.
The
researchers found that happiness really is contagious
7.
The
study described as the first to demonstrate the indirect spread of happiness
3.
Future tense
1.
a
virus people would be happy to catch
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