A multinational megastudy of the effects of gratitude practices on subjective well-being

Coles, Nicholas A. and Dang, Annabel V. and Oishi, Shigehiro and Adade, Abigail and Akintola, Aderonke A. and de Souza, Beatriz B. and Gjoneska, Biljana and Harris, Christine R. and Kesarwani, Dev and Pisareva, Dinara and Tee, Eugene Y.J. and Lyann, Goo and Günaydın, Gül and Lee, Gyuri and Yu, Hongbo and Choi, Hyewon and Chika Chukwuorji, John Bosco and Klitgaard, Karoline and Behnke, Maciej and Bergquist, Magnus and Engeset, Marit Gunda Gundersen and Taephant, Nattasuda and Durnev, Nikita and Spasovski, Ognen and Boggio, Paulo Sergio and Singh, Ram Manohar and Irmel, Robin and Barbosa, Sergio and Zhao, Shangcheng and Acar-Burkay, Sinem and Pfattheicher, Stefan and Ishii, Tatsunori and Goh Weng Yew, Victor and Dzokoto, Vivian and Soyalan, Zeynep and McCullough, Michael E. (2026) A multinational megastudy of the effects of gratitude practices on subjective well-being. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 123 (20). ISSN 1091-6490

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Abstract

Scholars have observed people from a variety of cultures using a variety of gratitude-related practices to change their emotions, outlooks, and social relationships. Across 34 countries purposively sampled to cover a broad set of cross-cultural differences (total N = 10,696), we experimentally tested the effects of 6 brief gratitude interventions on subjective moods, life outlooks, and social evaluations. Compared to 3 control tasks, gratitude practices immediately produced theorized improvements in positive affect (d = 0.37), negative affect (d = -0.22), optimism (d = 0.24), life satisfaction (d = 0.12), indebtedness (d = 0.15), and envy (d = -0.16). Notably, these effects varied across different gratitude practices (0.00 < τpractice < 0.08) and countries (0.10 < τcountry < 0.19). For instance, based on existing evidence, stakeholders can expect gratitude interventions deployed in a randomly selected country to improve positive affect-but not our other measured outcomes. To guide future inquiry into why this might be the case, we provide exploratory Bayesian estimates of the importance of 12 cross-cultural differences.
Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: big team science; culture; gratitude; megastudy; positive psychology
Divisions: Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences > Academic programs > Psychology
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Depositing User: Gül Günaydın
Date Deposited: 01 Jun 2026 12:03
Last Modified: 01 Jun 2026 12:03
URI: https://research.sabanciuniv.edu/id/eprint/54109

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