伟大的重新联系探讨重新建立联系的动机,研究社会渗透作为幸福感预测因素的作用

Nicholas Brody, Kate Blackburn, Leah E. LeFebvre
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究采用多种方法考察了个人参与关系重建的原因,以及重建过程中的自我披露与急性压力时期的幸福感之间的关系。我们运用社会渗透理论(Social Penetration Theory)来研究个体与休眠联系人重新建立联系的动机、他们选择的渠道、在重新建立关系的过程中伴侣参与不同程度自我披露的程度,以及自我披露与社会心理和关系结果的关系。参与者(N = 254)是从 Amazon Mechanical Turk 招募的,他们回答了一系列开放式和封闭式问题,这些问题与他们在 COVID-19 大流行早期重新建立联系的最重要的人有关。定性主题分析确定了促使个人重新建立联系的十个主题,包括关系休眠、健康检查和回忆。定量结果表明,在重新建立的关系中,自我披露的深度和广度分别与抑郁和孤独感呈负相关。自我披露的广度和深度也分别与对未来互动的预期呈正相关。在大流行期间,与以前的社会关系重新建立联系的能力与人们的心理和情感健康有着明显的联系,研究结果表明了在关系重新建立期间持续的自我披露所起的核心作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The great reconnection: Examining motives for relational reconnection and investigating social penetration as a predictor of well-being
This study employs multiple methods to examine why individuals engage in relational reconnection and how self-disclosure during the re-initiation process relates to well-being during a time of acute stress. We apply Social Penetration Theory to examine individuals’ motivation to reconnect with dormant contacts, which channels they selected, the extent to which partners engaged in various levels of self-disclosure during relational reconnection, and how self-disclosure related to psychosocial and relational outcomes. Participants ( N = 254) were recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk to answer a series of open- and closed-ended questions relating to the most important person they reconnected with during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Qualitative thematic analysis identified ten themes driving individuals to reconnect, including relational dormancy, health checks, and reminiscing. Quantitative results showed that depth and breadth of self-disclosure in reconnected relationships were each negatively related to depression and loneliness. Breadth and depth of self-disclosure were also each positively associated with anticipation of future interaction. The ability to re-engage with former social connections showed clear associations with people’s psychological and emotional well-being during the pandemic, and the findings demonstrate the central role of continued self-disclosure during relational reconnection.
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