1 University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2019 May;45(5):780-793. doi: 10.1177/0146167218796793. Epub 2018 Sep 28.
Average levels of loneliness have been suggested to differ between collectivistic and individualistic countries. However, we know little about how individual-level collectivism (i.e., perceiving the self or one's social environment as collectivistic) is related to loneliness. As individualism and collectivism imply different ideals about how individuals should be embedded in social relationships, they may imply distinct risks for loneliness. Specifically, less demanding ideals in individualism should imply the risk of lower actual social embeddedness; more demanding ideals in collectivism should imply the risk of higher perceived discrepancies from such ideals. Two cross-sectional survey studies in five European countries (Study 1: Austria, N = 239; Study 2: Italy, Portugal, Sweden, The Netherlands, total N = 860) revealed that higher collectivism was related to lower loneliness. Individualism indeed implied lower social embeddedness, but collectivism did not imply higher discrepancies from ideal embeddedness. We discuss implications for reducing loneliness in different cultural contexts.
孤独感的平均水平被认为在集体主义和个人主义国家之间存在差异。然而,我们对于个体层面的集体主义(即,将自我或自己的社会环境视为集体主义)与孤独感之间的关系知之甚少。由于个人主义和集体主义暗示了关于个体应该如何融入社会关系的不同理想,因此它们可能暗示了孤独感的不同风险。具体而言,个人主义中较低要求的理想应该暗示实际社会融入程度较低的风险;而集体主义中更高要求的理想则应该暗示与这些理想存在更高感知差距的风险。在五个欧洲国家进行的两项横断面调查研究(研究 1:奥地利,N=239;研究 2:意大利、葡萄牙、瑞典、荷兰,总 N=860)表明,较高的集体主义与较低的孤独感有关。事实上,个人主义确实暗示着较低的社会融入程度,但集体主义并不意味着与理想融入程度的差距更大。我们讨论了在不同文化背景下减少孤独感的影响。