Table 6 Descriptive statistics of self-reported demographics and individual differences of 493 participants considered in the study

From: Life events as predictors of wellbeing outcomes

Covariates

Distribution

 

Independent Variables

  

Demographic Characteristics

  

Gender

Male:Female = 288:205

Age

[21,68], μ = 35.85, σ = 10.04

Cognitive Ability (Shipley scale)

  

Fluid (Abstraction)

[5,24], μ = 17.06, σ = 2.80

Crystallized (Vocabulary)

[22:40], μ = 33.47, σ = 3.79

Personality Trait (BFI scale)

  

Openness

[2.08,5], μ = 3.84, σ = 0.61

Conscientiousness

[1.92,5], μ = 3.92, σ = 0.62

Extraversion

[1.58,4.92], μ = 3.38, σ = 0.69

Agreeableness

[2.08,5], μ = 3.91, σ = 0.57

Neuroticism

[1,4.75], μ = 2.41, σ = 0.78

Trait-level Wellbeing

  

Positive Affect (PANAS-X)

[13,49], μ = 34.26, σ = 5.85

Negative Affect (PANAS-X)

[10,40], μ = 17.21, σ = 4.99

Anxiety (STAI)

[20,67], μ = 37.82, σ = 9.40

Sleep Quality (PSQI)

[1,17], μ = 6.59, σ = 2.58

Dependent Variables

  

State-level Wellbeing

  

Positive Affect (PANAS-Short)

[5, 25], μ = 11.81, σ = 4.31

Negative Affect (PANAS-Short)

[10,40], μ = 17.21, σ = 4.99

Stress (5-point Likert)

[1,5], μ = 2.01, σ = 0.91

Anxiety (5-point Likert)

[1,5], μ = 1.70, σ = 0.83

Sleep (#Hours)

[0,20], μ = 6.93, σ = 1.44

  1. The variables are grouped into independent and dependent variables for the regression models. The distributions include the range, mean (μ), and standard deviation (σ).