Julian ter Horst

ORCID: 0000-0002-2555-4742
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Psychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction
  • Mental Health Research Topics
  • COVID-19 and Mental Health
  • Behavioral Health and Interventions
  • Identity, Memory, and Therapy
  • Optimism, Hope, and Well-being
  • Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics
  • Innovative Human-Technology Interaction
  • Digital Mental Health Interventions
  • Impact of Technology on Adolescents
  • Psychological and Temporal Perspectives Research

Osnabrück University
2023-2024

University of Münster
2024

Abstract The Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, has had devastating effects the Ukrainian population and global economy, environment, political order. However, little is known about psychological states surrounding outbreak war, particularly mental well-being individuals outside Ukraine. Here, we present a longitudinal experience-sampling study convenience sample from 17 European countries (total participants = 1,341, total assessments 44,894, with >100 5) that allows us to...

10.1038/s41467-024-44693-6 article EN cc-by Nature Communications 2024-02-20

Abstract We present a global experience‐sampling method (ESM) study aimed at describing, predicting, and understanding individual differences in well‐being during times of crisis such as the COVID‐19 pandemic. This international ESM is collaborative effort over 60 interdisciplinary researchers from around world “Coping with Corona” (CoCo) project. The comprises trait‐, state‐, daily‐level data 7490 participants 20 countries (total measurements = 207,263; total daily 73,295) collected between...

10.1111/spc3.12813 article EN cc-by Social and Personality Psychology Compass 2023-06-29

The experience sampling method (ESM) and comparable assessment approaches are increasingly becoming popular tools for well-being research. In part, they so because represent more direct assessing individuals’ experienced during a specified period, whereas one-time, retrospective evaluations of that episode believed to introduce systematic biases. Along these lines, the peak-end rule states most extreme recent sensations an disproportionally influence judgments. However, it has yet be...

10.31234/osf.io/njmcy preprint EN 2024-02-09

The experience sampling method (ESM) and comparable assessment approaches are increasingly becoming popular tools for well-being research. In part, they so because represent more direct assessing individuals’ experienced during a specified period, whereas one-time, retrospective evaluations of that episode believed to introduce systematic biases. Along these lines, the peak-end rule states most extreme recent sensations an disproportionally influence judgments. However, it has yet be...

10.1177/08902070241235969 article EN European Journal of Personality 2024-03-18

The ubiquitous presence of smartphones has made them an integral part our social lives. A well-known example this phenomenon is phubbing, where smartphone use distracts people from their daily interpersonal interactions. While previous research mostly relied on often biased global self-reports, work introduces a novel approach to assessing phubbing in real life. To end, we conducted empirical study that integrated experience sampling and mobile sensing methods obtain more objective measure...

10.1145/3613905.3651009 article EN 2024-05-02

We present a global experience-sampling method (ESM) study aimed at describing, predicting, and understanding individual differences in well-being during times of crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic. This international ESM is collaborative effort over 60 interdisciplinary researchers from around world “Coping with Corona” (CoCo) project. The comprises trait-, state-, daily-level data 7,490 participants 20 countries (total measurements = 207,263; total daily 73,295) collected between October...

10.31234/osf.io/9sbmy preprint EN 2023-06-16
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