Lakey B, Heller K
Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina, Wilmington 28403-3297.
Am J Community Psychol. 1988 Dec;16(6):811-24. doi: 10.1007/BF00930894.
This research combined experimental and correlational methods to investigate the effects of social support on social problem-solving effectiveness and perceived stress. During a wait period, college students were given the opportunity to work on practice items from a mildly stressful social problem-solving task, either alone or in the company of a close friend. Participants and friends were allowed to talk about the practice items but were not required to do so, and supportive transactions were tape recorded and content analyzed. All students then completed social problem-solving and perceived stress items alone. Participants who waited with friends did not show superior problem-solving effectiveness unless companions provided particular supportive behaviors. Participants with high perceived support scores rated the experiment as less stressful than those with low scores, but perceived support was not related to companions' actual supportive behaviors. The results were discussed in terms of implications for understanding the mechanisms of social support.
本研究结合实验法和相关法,以探讨社会支持对社会问题解决效能和感知压力的影响。在一段等待期内,大学生有机会独自或在密友陪伴下处理一项轻度压力的社会问题解决任务中的练习项目。参与者和朋友可以谈论练习项目,但不要求这样做,支持性交流被录音并进行内容分析。然后所有学生独自完成社会问题解决和感知压力项目。除非同伴提供特定的支持行为,否则与朋友一起等待的参与者并未表现出更高的问题解决效能。感知支持得分高的参与者比得分低的参与者认为实验压力更小,但感知支持与同伴的实际支持行为无关。从理解社会支持机制的意义方面对结果进行了讨论。