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Paper Title

To Belong Is to Matter: Sense of Belonging Enhances Meaning in Life

Authors

Roy F. Baumeister
Roy F. Baumeister
Tyler F. Stillman
Tyler F. Stillman
Nathaniel M. Lambert
Nathaniel M. Lambert
Joshua A. Hicks
Joshua A. Hicks
Shanmukh V Kamble
Shanmukh V Kamble
Frank D. Fincham
Frank D. Fincham

Keywords

  • Sense of Belonging
  • Meaning in Life
  • Social Support
  • Social Value
  • Belongingness Priming
  • Perceived Meaningfulness
  • Longitudinal Study
  • Correlational Study
  • Experimental Study
  • Social Connections
  • Belonging-Mediated Meaning
  • Independent Evaluations
  • Psychological Well-Being
  • Belongingness Effects
  • Meaningful Life

Article Type

Original Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 39 | Issue : 11 | Page No : 1418-1427

Published On

August, 2013

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Abstract

In four methodologically diverse studies (N = 644), we found correlational (Study 1), longitudinal (Study 2), and experimental (Studies 3 and 4) evidence that a sense of belonging predicts how meaningful life is perceived to be. In Study 1 (n = 126), we found a strong positive correlation between sense of belonging and meaningfulness. In Study 2 (n = 248), we found that initial levels of sense of belonging predicted perceived meaningfulness of life, obtained 3 weeks later. Furthermore, initial sense of belonging predicted independent evaluations of participants essays on meaning in life. In Studies 3 (n = 105) and 4 (n = 165), we primed participants with belongingness, social support, or social value and found that those primed with belongingness (Study 3) or who increased in belongingness (Study 4) reported the highest levels of perceived meaning. In Study 4, belonging mediated the relationship between experimental condition and meaning.

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