I suspect experience sampling is much more costly and time-consuming to get data on than alternatives, and there’s probably much less data. Life satisfaction or other simple survey questions about subjective wellbeing might be good enough proxies, and there’s already a lot of available data out there.
Here’s a pretty comprehensive post on using subjective wellbeing:
I suspect experience sampling is much more costly and time-consuming to get data on than alternatives, and there’s probably much less data. Life satisfaction or other simple survey questions about subjective wellbeing might be good enough proxies, and there’s already a lot of available data out there.
Here’s a pretty comprehensive post on using subjective wellbeing:
A Happiness Manifesto: Why and How Effective Altruism Should Rethink its Approach to Maximising Human Welfare by Michael Plant
Another good place to read more about this is https://whatworkswellbeing.org/our-work/measuring-evaluating/