Time Use and Well-being, and Large Survey Studies

TitleTime Use and Well-being, and Large Survey Studies
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsSmith, DM
JournalForum for Health Economics and Policy
Volume14
Issue3
PaginationArticle 8
Call Numbernewpubs20110418_Smith3.pdf
KeywordsMethodology, Time Use
Abstract

This paper reviews several methods for measuring how people spend their time, and how they feel during these different activities, and argues that some of these methods could be well suited for large scale longitudinal surveys. Because time use methods allow for the quantitative assessment of the dynamics of human experience, they provide opportunities to explore numerous research questions that cannot be readily answered with more traditional summary measures of well-being. In the last decade or two, techniques have become available that can capture the dynamics of time use and well-being in ways that also reduce methodological problems such as biased recall. The paper describes several such methods, with a discussion of how they are implemented, and a comparison of their relative strengths and weaknesses. In the final section, the paper describes how the addition of time use measures can enhance national surveys such as the Health and Retirement Study by a) opening new avenues of research, and b) clarifying previous findings from more traditional measures of well being.

URLhttp://www.bepress.com/fhep/14/3/8
Endnote Keywords

Time Allocation/longitudinal Studies/biased recall/biased recall/mid-term review/mid-term review/Methodology

Endnote ID

25160

Citation Key7553