chopik in A Sentence

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    They described colder, more neglectful memories of their parents,” Chopik says.

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    Your memories, Chopik explains, might be the key to lifelong health and happiness.

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    Family relationships are often enjoyable too, Chopik says, but sometimes they involve serious, negative, and monotonous interactions.

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    Family relationships are often enjoyable too, Chopik said, but sometimes they involve serious, negative and monotonous interactions.

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    William Chopik, assistant professor of psychology and co-author of the study, said,“We spend a lot of time with our partners.

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    Chopik's findings, which appear in Health Psychology, revealed that mere perceptions put mental and physical health on the line for decades to come.

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    Chopik says his research is the first to look at older adults' parental perceptions, and it is the largest longitudinal study of its kind.

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    Previous research suggests happy people are generally healthy people, but Chopik wanted to take it one step further by exploring the health effects of interpersonal relationships.

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    Maybe not- these memories still predicted health and depression 18 and six years after they were assessed when people were well into adulthood,” Chopik says.

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    For the first study, Chopik analyzed survey information about relationships and self-rated health and happiness from 271,053 participants of all ages from nearly 100 countries.

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    There are studies that show people have the power to change their personalities, as long as they engage in things that make them change,” Chopik said.

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    There are studies that show people have the power to change their personalities, as long as they engage in things that make them change,” Chopik concludes.

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    A recent example, Chopik explained, was Google's tearjerker Super Bowl ad,“Loretta,” in which an elderly man uses his Google Assistant to help him remember details about his late wife.

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    Friendships often take a“back seat” in relationships research, Chopik added, which is strange, especially considering that they might be more influential for our happiness and health than other relationships.

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    Friendships often take a“back seat” in relationships research, Chopik adds, which is strange, especially considering that they might be more influential for our happiness and health than other relationships.

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    While memories, attitudes, and awareness change as we age, Chopik explains that the physical and mental effects one endures as a result of parental perceptions did not fade over time.

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    Chopik said that may be because of the optional nature of relationships- that over time, we keep the friends we like and make us feel good and discard the rest.

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    Chopik says that may be because of the optional nature of relationships- that over time, we keep the friends we like and make us feel good and discard the rest.

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    In a pair of studies involving nearly 280,000 people, William Chopik of Michigan State University in the US found that friendships become increasingly important to one's happiness and health across one's lifespan.

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    In a pair of studies involving nearly 280,000 people, William Chopik, assistant professor of psychology at Michigan State University, also found that friendships become increasingly important to one's happiness and health across the lifespan.

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    That's shown clearly in research(link is external)led by William Chopik of Michigan State University who showed in a review of two surveys taken by about 280,000 people that“valuing friendships was related to better functioning, particularly among older adults,” and that“only strain from friendships predicted more chronic illnesses over a six-year period”(Chopik, 2017).

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