Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2009 Dec;97(6):977-91. doi: 10.1037/a0016076.
The discrepancy between an individual's loneliness and the number of connections in a social network is well documented, yet little is known about the placement of loneliness within, or the spread of loneliness through, social networks. The authors use network linkage data from the population-based Framingham Heart Study to trace the topography of loneliness in people's social networks and the path through which loneliness spreads through these networks. Results indicated that loneliness occurs in clusters, extends up to 3 degrees of separation, is disproportionately represented at the periphery of social networks, and spreads through a contagious process. The spread of loneliness was found to be stronger than the spread of perceived social connections, stronger for friends than family members, and stronger for women than for men. The results advance understanding of the broad social forces that drive loneliness and suggest that efforts to reduce loneliness in society may benefit by aggressively targeting the people in the periphery to help repair their social networks and to create a protective barrier against loneliness that can keep the whole network from unraveling.
个体的孤独感与其社交网络中的连接数量之间的差异已有充分记录,但对于孤独感在社交网络中的位置或通过社交网络传播的方式知之甚少。作者使用基于人群的弗雷明汉心脏研究的网络联系数据来追踪人们社交网络中孤独感的分布情况,以及孤独感通过这些网络传播的途径。研究结果表明,孤独感呈聚集分布,可延伸至 3 度分离,在社交网络的外围不成比例地存在,并通过传染过程传播。研究发现,孤独感的传播比感知到的社交联系的传播更强,朋友之间的传播比家庭成员之间的传播更强,女性比男性之间的传播更强。研究结果增进了对导致孤独的广泛社会力量的理解,并表明,为减少社会中的孤独感而做出的努力,可能会通过积极针对社交网络外围的人来获得益处,帮助他们修复社交网络,并建立一个防止孤独的保护屏障,以免整个网络瓦解。