Edwards Elizabeth J, Zhang Xiaohan, Chu Khanh Linh, Cosgrove Louise K, Vaughan Robert S
School of Education, The University of Queensland, QLD, Australia.
School of Education, Language & Psychology, York St John University, UK.
Pers Individ Dif. 2022 Nov;198:111826. doi: 10.1016/j.paid.2022.111826. Epub 2022 Jul 22.
The present study investigated the relationship between anxiety, social support, living arrangements and cognitive performance of university students during the global pandemic. Two hundred and fifteen students participated by completing online questionnaires. Separate moderated multiple regression models were used to test whether social support (Family, Friends, Significant Other subscales of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support) moderated the relationship between anxiety (Anxiety subscale of Depression, Anxiety Stress Scale), living arrangements (Living Alone vs Living with Friends and Family) and cognitive performance (Cognitive Failures Questionnaire), after controlling for comorbid depression. The results for each level of perceived social support suggested that anxiety was negatively associated with cognitive performance. Our most significant finding was that for students living alone, social support from a significant other offered a protective factor, whereby buffering the anxiety related cognitive deficits prevalent in those who reported lower social support. These data have important practical implications for supporting the social-emotional and academic needs of university students during the global pandemic.
本研究调查了全球大流行期间大学生焦虑、社会支持、居住安排与认知表现之间的关系。215名学生通过完成在线问卷参与了研究。在控制了共病抑郁后,使用单独的调节多元回归模型来检验社会支持(感知社会支持多维量表中的家庭、朋友、重要他人子量表)是否调节了焦虑(抑郁、焦虑压力量表中的焦虑子量表)、居住安排(独居与与朋友和家人同住)和认知表现(认知失误问卷)之间的关系。每个感知社会支持水平的结果表明,焦虑与认知表现呈负相关。我们最显著的发现是,对于独居学生而言,来自重要他人的社会支持提供了一个保护因素,从而缓冲了那些报告社会支持较低者中普遍存在的与焦虑相关的认知缺陷。这些数据对于在全球大流行期间支持大学生的社会情感和学业需求具有重要的实际意义。