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This paper seeks to quantify scholarly interest in the rapidly emerging field of Positive Psychology (PP) and to empirically map the contours of the discipline using six different methodologies. Results document extraordinary growth in the last decade and confirm that scholars in this area have devoted the lion's share of their attention to two of the three 'Pillars' of PP as proposed by SeUgman and Csikszentmihalyi (2000): (1) the study of positive subjective experience and (2) positive personal traits. While interest in positive institutions has been somewhat sparse, there has been increased concern with the topics of 'resilience' and eudaimonia (broadly defined). The latter developments help to dispel the myth that PP is an elite endeavour solely concerned with Pollyanna-style 'happiology' in people who find themselves in idyllic circumstances. Hopefully the results of our content analysis of the field will encourage instructors who teach PP to provide their students with a well-balanced curriculum, one that accurately reflects the heterogeneity of the field, and one that mirrors recent scholarly trends.
Keywords: definition, positive psychology, review, domains, temporal trends, specializations
As Noted by Yen (2010),
"over the past 10 years, there has been a literal explosion of work within the new subdiscipline of positive psychology. Commanding record enrollment rates in undergraduate psychology courses across North America and around the world and attracting a considerable amount of media attention, positive psychology has become positively faddish. It is Harvard's most popular course, having recently supplanted introductory economics. . . . Within the academy, the field has rapidly established itself through a large and growing body of research data, journals, books, articles and special issues, international associations and conferences, funding, dedicated research centers, and courses and graduate programs. " (p. 67)
While a number of authors have noted that increased attention is being given to Positive Psychology (PP), pronouncements of a boom have rarely been substantiated by empirical research that has approached the question using a quantitative methodology. In the current article, we document the growth of scholarly interest in PP by performing a year-by-year count of citations contained in PsycINFO. At the same time, in an effort to contribute to 'boundary work,' we also empirically map the contours of the field using six different methodologies. To briefly preview...





