Predicting and increasing subjective well-being: response function model and rhythmic movement therapy
Irina Malkina-Pykh

TL;DR
This study applied a nonlinear response function model to evaluate how rhythmic movement therapy improves subjective well-being, demonstrating significant psychological and well-being enhancements and validating the model's predictive capability.
Contribution
The paper introduces the RFSWB model for assessing subjective well-being changes and demonstrates its effectiveness in evaluating RMT intervention outcomes.
Findings
Significant improvements in subjective well-being after RMT
RFSWB model accurately predicts SWB changes
Psychological variables mediate well-being increase
Abstract
Background. The objective of the present study was to apply the nonlinear response function model of subjective well-being (RFSWB model) to evaluate the outcome of rhythmic movement therapy (RMT) for increasing subjective well-being and to analyze whether intervention-related changes in several psychological variables were mechanisms underlying SWB increase in subjects participating in RMT group. Methods. A total of 273 subjects (54 males and 219 females, mean age was 37.3(SD=10.5) years) were selected at random in nonclinical population and assessed with the appropriate surveys and questionnaires. The RMT program was proposed to the 105 subjects (24 males, 81 females, and mean age 37.6(SD=11.7) years) with very low, low and medium SWB level. Control group was included. Findings. Results revealed that: a) substantial changes in SWB and underlying psychological state were observed among…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
