Scaling the Semantics of Satisfaction
| Year of Publication |
2000
|
|---|---|
| Author | |
| Journal |
Social Indicators Research
|
| Volume |
49
|
| Issue |
2
|
| Number of Pages |
147-180
|
| Abstract |
Self-assessed satisfaction is typically measured on an ordinal scale of verbal categories. Here, data from the 1992 Wave 1 of the US Health and Retirement Study (N = 12,654 respondents) are used to investigate whether the boundaries that persons implicitly set between contiguous categories are uniformly set across persons and/or across domains of satisfaction, or are variably sensitive to status characteristics and/or to domain. Analysis demonstrates systematic variations and sensitivities in the semantics of satisfaction. This semantic elasticity affects other estimates in models of self-assessed satisfaction. 3 Tables, 3 Figures, 43 References. Adapted from the source document |
| Call Number |
pubs_1998_Hazelrigg_LSocIndic.pdf
|
| URL |
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27522430
|
| Download citation |