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This is a study about perceptions of well-being. Its purpose is to
investigate how these perceptions are organized in the minds of
different groups of American adults, to find valid and efficient
ways of measuring these percep tions, to suggest ways these
measurement methods could be implemented to yield a series of
social indicators, and to provide some initial readings on these
indicators; i.e., some information about the levels of well-being
perceived by Americans. The findings are based on data from more
than five thousand Americans and include results from four separate
representative samplings of the American population. One of the
ways our research is unusual is that it includes a major
methodological component. Typical surveys involve a modest effort
at instru ment development, the application of the instrument to a
group of respondents, and an analysis of the resulting data that
mainly describes the people studied. Our work, however, was
implemented in a series of sequential cycles, each of which
consisted of conceptual development, instrument design, data
collection, analysis, and interpretation. Ideas and findings
generated in prior cycles affected the design of subsequent cycles.
Scientific research in the service of economic and social
development is supported by most governments and many kinds of
organizations, but decisions about the determination of priorities
and the allocation of resources are always difficult. This volume,
first published in 1979, contains a comprehensive and meticulous
study of the factors, human as well as material, related to
scientists' effectiveness in meeting research goals. An
international research team, co-ordinated by Unesco, surveyed
members of more than 1,200 different research groups working in a
variety of disciplines in universities, government and private
research institutes and industry. Systematic samples from six
European countries - Austria, Belgium, Finland, Hungary, Poland and
Sweden - are represented in the data. The authors' innovative
conceptual approaches and techniques will be of great interest to
organizational psychologists and sociologists; their substantive
findings, which challenge conventional wisdom about strategies for
maximizing scientific productivity, will have important
implications for all those concerned with science policy planning.
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