When the Harvard Study of Adult Development began in 1938, the world was on the edge of catastrophe. The Great Depression had barely ended. Europe was drifting toward war. Mental health was largely ...
Wealth, fame and success still don’t make us happy — but strong relationships do. That has been the consistent message from ...
An 87-year-long Harvard study found that social fitness — maintaining your personal relationships and keeping them in good shape — was the No. 1 thing the happiest, longest-living people have in ...
An 85-year Harvard study reveals what's missing in our lives today, and how simple daily habits can help us stay happy. The ...
Harvard started looking into what makes people happy in 1938 with its Harvard Study of Adult Development. The most important finding of this study is that health flows from how happy people are with ...
In its next phase, the Health and Happiness Study aims to collect wellbeing data from over 10,000 global participants using surveys, Garmin smartwatches, and smartphones The pilot study revealed ...
Wealth, fame and success still don’t make us happy — but strong relationships do. That has been the consistent message from the Harvard Study of Adult Development — the longest-running scientific ...
OLATHE, Kan., March 18, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Garmin (NYSE: GRMN), in collaboration with researchers at Harvard University and the University of Oxford, today announced the early results from the first ...
Harvard’s 90-year study finds happiness doesn’t come from money or success but from a few close, reliable relationships, and warns loneliness can be as deadly as smoking. Wealth, fame and success ...
In its next phase, the Health and Happiness Study aims to collect wellbeing data from over 10,000 global participants using surveys, Garmin smartwatches, and smartphones OLATHE, Kan., March 18, 2025 ...