{"id":174512,"date":"2022-02-02T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2022-02-02T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ceotudent.com\/?p=174512"},"modified":"2022-02-07T00:11:42","modified_gmt":"2022-02-06T21:11:42","slug":"what-could-make-you-as-happy-as-eating-2000-chocolates-according-to-neuroscience","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ceotudent.com\/en\/what-could-make-you-as-happy-as-eating-2000-chocolates-according-to-neuroscience","title":{"rendered":"What Could Make You As Happy As Eating 2000 Chocolates According To Neuroscience?"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Wanting to be happier is a universal trait. Research on happiness (aka positive psychology) has mushroomed over the past two decades. Major research institutions have made important and often thought-provoking moves towards the joy of joy, with surprising and often illuminating results.<\/div>\n
The research we’re reviewing today is one in which researchers use electromagnetic brain scans and heart rate monitors to create what they call “mood-enhancing values” for different stimuli. In other words, the researchers had participants do, study, or listen to different things and measure how happy it made them. This research was conducted in the United Kingdom.<\/div>\n
One thing got ahead of the others. The thing turned out to give participants the equivalent of 2,000 chocolates of brain stimulation. It was even as encouraging as earning $25,000. So what was this magical stimulus?<\/div>\n