The surprising science of happiness | Dan Gilbert

By TED

PsychologyScienceEducation
Share:

Key Concepts:

  • Prefrontal Cortex: The part of the brain responsible for experience simulation.
  • Impact Bias: The tendency for our experience simulator to overestimate the difference between different outcomes.
  • Synthetic Happiness: Happiness created when we don't get what we wanted.
  • Natural Happiness: Happiness gained when we get what we wanted.
  • Psychological Immune System: A system of cognitive processes that help us change our views of the world to feel better.
  • Free Choice Paradigm: An experimental method used to demonstrate the synthesis of happiness.
  • Anterograde Amnesia: The inability to form new memories.

1. The Evolutionary Advantage of a Large Brain and the Prefrontal Cortex

  • The human brain has nearly tripled in mass in two million years, a short time evolutionarily.
  • This growth led to new brain structures, notably the frontal lobe and the prefrontal cortex.
  • The prefrontal cortex functions as an "experience simulator," allowing us to mentally try out experiences before living them.
  • This ability is a unique human adaptation, comparable to opposable thumbs, upright posture, and language.
  • Example: We can imagine the taste of liver and onion ice cream and reject it without actually making it.

2. The Impact Bias: Overestimating the Difference Between Outcomes

  • People often fail to accurately predict their future happiness.
  • The "impact bias" is the tendency to believe that different outcomes will have a greater impact on our happiness than they actually do.
  • Example: People expect winning the lottery to bring more happiness and becoming paraplegic to bring more unhappiness than is actually observed.
  • Data shows that lottery winners and paraplegics report similar levels of happiness one year after the event.
  • Studies show that major life events (winning/losing elections, relationships, promotions, etc.) have less impact and shorter duration than expected.
  • Traumas that occurred over three months ago generally have no impact on happiness.

3. The Synthesis of Happiness: Finding Contentment Even When Things Don't Go Our Way

  • Humans possess a "psychological immune system" that helps them change their views to feel better about their circumstances.
  • We often believe happiness is something to be found, rather than something we can create.
  • Examples of people synthesizing happiness:
    • Jim Wright (former Speaker of the House): Despite resigning in disgrace, he claims to be better off in almost every way.
    • Maurice Victim: After 37 years in prison for a crime he didn't commit, he called his experience "glorious."
    • Harry S. Langerman: Missed the opportunity to invest in McDonald's, but seemingly content.
    • Pete Best: The original drummer for The Beatles, claimed to be happier than he would have been with the band.
  • Synthetic happiness is often viewed as inferior to natural happiness (getting what we want).
  • This belief is economically driven, as a society that values contentment wouldn't fuel consumerism.
  • The speaker argues that synthetic happiness is just as real and enduring as natural happiness.

4. Experimental Evidence for the Synthesis of Happiness

  • The "free choice paradigm" demonstrates synthetic happiness:
    • Subjects rank a set of items (e.g., Monet prints).
    • They choose between two closely ranked items to take home.
    • Later, they re-rank the items.
    • The chosen item is typically ranked higher, and the unchosen item is ranked lower, demonstrating a change in preference.
  • Experiment with anterograde amnesiac patients:
    • Amnesiacs performed the same ranking and choice task with Monet prints.
    • They could not remember which print they had chosen.
    • Despite this, they still showed the same pattern of preference change, liking the print they owned (unbeknownst to them) more.
    • This suggests that synthetic happiness is a genuine affective change, not just rationalization.

5. The Role of Freedom and Irreversibility in Happiness

  • Freedom to choose and change one's mind is beneficial for natural happiness.
  • However, freedom can hinder synthetic happiness.
  • The psychological immune system works best when we are "stuck" or "trapped."
  • Example: We are more likely to find positive aspects of a marriage than a casual date because of the commitment.
  • Photography course experiment:
    • Students took photos and chose one to keep, with either the option to exchange it later (reversible condition) or no option to exchange it (irreversible condition).
    • Students in the irreversible condition were happier with their chosen photo than those in the reversible condition.
    • Students predicted they would prefer the reversible condition, demonstrating a misunderstanding of how synthetic happiness works.

6. The Importance of Bounded Ambition and Fears

  • Adam Smith: Overrating the difference between situations leads to misery and disorders.
  • Bounded ambition leads to joyful work, while unbounded ambition leads to negative behaviors.
  • Bounded fears lead to prudence, while unbounded fears lead to recklessness and cowardice.

7. Conclusion

  • Our longings and worries are often overblown.
  • We have the capacity to manufacture happiness when we choose experience.
  • Understanding the psychological immune system can help us make better choices and find contentment in various circumstances.

Chat with this Video

AI-Powered

Hi! I can answer questions about this video "The surprising science of happiness | Dan Gilbert". What would you like to know?

Chat is based on the transcript of this video and may not be 100% accurate.

Related Videos

Ready to summarize another video?

Summarize YouTube Video