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引用次数: 0
摘要
孤独是影响人们身心健康的最普遍的状况之一。无论年龄、性别、种族、宗教信仰或社会经济地位如何,所有人群都存在孤独感。孤独感与社会交往的质量和可用性有关,可以在不同的社会领域表现出来。虽然孤独的负面影响已得到证实,但孤独的机制和调节因素仍需进一步研究。在本研究中,我们从多维角度探讨了孤独感。我们重点研究了社会熵与不同类型的孤独感--家庭型和非家庭型--之间的关联。研究对象为 157 名 35-55 岁的成年人,其中 55% 为女性。研究方法包括社交和情感孤独感量表(SELSA-S)、"社交-自足 "问卷和心理健康量表(自主和个人成长量表)。为了检验调节效应,我们使用了 Hayes Process v.4(模型 1-3)。结果证实,社会熵能预测家庭和非家庭中的孤独感,而自主性和个人成长则能调节这种效应。我们发现家庭和非家庭孤独感有两种不同的调节机制:平行负调节影响社会熵-家庭孤独感关联,负调节影响社会熵-非家庭孤独感关联。结果表明,个人成长和自主性得分越高,它们对社会熵和孤独感关联的影响就越小。只有在非家庭孤独感方面发现了性别差异。
Moderation Effects of Autonomy and Personal Growth on the Association of Sociotropy and Different Types of Loneliness
Loneliness is one of the most widespread conditions that affect one’s physical and mental health. Loneliness is found in all populations despite age, gender, ethnicity, religion, or socio-economic status. It is related to the quality and availability of social interactions and can be expressed in different social domains. While the negative effects of loneliness are well-established, mechanisms and moderators of loneliness still need more examination. In the present study, we approached loneliness from a multidimensional perspective. We focused on associations between sociotropy and different types of loneliness—family and non-family. Participants were 157 adults aged 35–55, 55% females. Methods were the Social and Emotional Loneliness Scale (SELSA-S), “Sociotropy—Self-Sufficiency” Questionnaire, and Psychological well-being scale (scales of Autonomy and Personal growth). To test moderation effects, we applied Hayes Process v.4 (models 1–3). Results confirmed that sociotropy predicted loneliness, both family and non-family, and autonomy and personal growth moderated this effect. We found two different moderation mechanisms for family and non-family loneliness: parallel negative moderation affected sociotropy—family loneliness association, and negative moderated moderation affected sociotropy—non-family loneliness association. Results suggested that the higher were scores on personal growth and autonomy, the less they affected the association of sociotropy and loneliness. Gender differences in moderation were found only for non-family loneliness.