Lu Yi, Löckenhoff Corinna E
Department of Psychology, Cornell University.
Self Identity. 2024;23(5-6):505-520. doi: 10.1080/15298868.2024.2400732. Epub 2024 Sep 24.
This study examined whether the average levels and the temporal extension of self-continuity varied over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. Three demographically matched adult life-span samples (n = 223 each) were gathered in the U.S. in fall 2016, summer 2020, and winter 2022/23. Participants rated their self-continuity 1/5/10 years into the past and future. Multi-level analyses examined the effects of temporal distance, past/future direction, and assessment time while controlling for demographics. Average self-continuity did not vary across assessments, but the tendency to report lower self-continuity for more distant times was weaker during the pandemic, and the tendency to report lower self-continuity for past versus future was weaker during and after the pandemic. Discussion focuses on the role of slowed time perception during the pandemic and the possibility that mid- and post-pandemic reports of past self-continuity were elevated by nostalgic self-reflection, coupled with increased uncertainty about the future.
本研究考察了自我连续性的平均水平和时间跨度在新冠疫情期间是否有所变化。2016年秋季、2020年夏季和2022/23年冬季,在美国收集了三个在人口统计学上匹配的成年寿命样本(每个样本n = 223)。参与者对他们过去和未来1/5/10年的自我连续性进行评分。多层次分析在控制人口统计学因素的同时,考察了时间距离、过去/未来方向和评估时间的影响。平均自我连续性在各次评估中没有变化,但在疫情期间,报告较远时间的自我连续性较低的倾向较弱,并且在疫情期间及之后,报告过去与未来的自我连续性较低的倾向较弱。讨论聚焦于疫情期间时间感知放缓的作用,以及疫情中期和后期对过去自我连续性的报告可能因怀旧的自我反思而升高,同时对未来的不确定性增加。