Social Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Tsukuba , Faculty of Medicine, Tsukuba, Japan, 3058577, Japan.
F1000Res. 2021 Aug 9;10:776. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.55398.2. eCollection 2021.
Hikikomori is a Japanese social withdrawal phenomenon which, in recent years, is spreading in western developed countries as well. Spending a lot of time secluded indoors, watching and playing with fictional narratives may be relatively common for Hikikomori people and may represent a protective factor for their psychological well-being. We evaluated the role of enjoying fictional narratives on empathy, relaxation, depression, and anxiety in people with Hikikomori experience, in relation to their daily consumption of fictional narratives and their emotional transportation toward fictional narratives. Hikikomori from one psychiatric clinic and three different support facilities were enrolled in this study. Multidimensional empathy scale, CES-D, STAI questionnaire, and relaxation inventory self-report scale were used as outcome measures. We found a significant correlation between empathy and emotional transportation toward fictional narratives and between relaxation during watching and reading fictional narratives and consumption frequency of fictional narratives. We failed, however, to find any significant correlation with depression and anxiety. These findings suggest a possible correlation between fiction and empathy/relaxation response; however, any causal relationship is not proven, consequently we deem that further investigations with a larger sample size are required for a better understanding.
蛰居现象是一种日本社会退缩现象,近年来也在西方发达国家蔓延。花大量时间独自呆在室内,观看和玩虚拟叙事可能对蛰居者来说相对常见,并且可能是他们心理健康的保护因素。我们评估了享受虚构叙事对有蛰居经历的人的同理心、放松、抑郁和焦虑的作用,以及他们对虚构叙事的日常消费和情感投入。我们从一家精神病诊所和三个不同的支持机构招募了蛰居者。使用多维同理心量表、CES-D、STAI 问卷和放松量表自我报告量表作为结果测量。我们发现同理心和对虚构叙事的情感投入之间,以及观看和阅读虚构叙事时的放松和虚构叙事消费频率之间存在显著相关性。然而,我们没有发现与抑郁和焦虑有任何显著相关性。这些发现表明虚构作品与同理心/放松反应之间可能存在关联;但是,并没有证明任何因果关系,因此我们认为需要进行更大样本量的进一步研究以更好地理解。