This is what loneliness looks like: A mixed-methods study of loneliness in adolescence and young adulthood
Matthews, Timothy ORCID: 0000-0001-9955-6524, Fisher, Helen L., Bryan, Bridget T., Danese, Andrea, Moffitt, Terrie E., Qualter, Pamela, Verity, Lily and Arseneault, Louise (2021) This is what loneliness looks like: A mixed-methods study of loneliness in adolescence and young adulthood. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 46 (1). pp. 18-27. ISSN 0165-0254 (doi:https://doi.org/10.1177/0165025420979357)
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Abstract
The present study used quantitative and qualitative methods to explore how lonely young people are seen from others' perspectives, in terms of their personality, behaviour and life circumstances. Data were drawn from the Environmental Risk Longitudinal Twin Study, a cohort of 2,232 individuals born in the United Kingdom in the mid-1990s. When participants were aged 18, they provided self-reports of loneliness, and informant ratings of loneliness were provided by interviewers, as well as participants' parents and siblings. Interviewers further provided Big Five personality ratings, and detailed written notes in which they documented their perceptions of the participants and their reflections on the content of the interview. In the quantitative section of the paper, regression analyses were used to examine the perceptibility of loneliness, and how participants' loneliness related to their perceived personality traits. The informant ratings of participants' loneliness showed good agreement with self-reports. Furthermore, loneliness was associated with lower perceived conscientiousness, agreeableness and extraversion, and higher perceived neuroticism. Within-twin pair analyses indicated that these associations were partly explained by common underlying genetic influences. In the qualitative section of the study, the loneliest 5% of study participants (N=108) were selected, and thematic analysis was applied to the study' interviewers' notes about those participants. Three themes were identified and named: 'uncomfortable in own skin', 'clustering of risk', and 'difficulties accessing social resources'. These results add depth to the current conceptualisation of loneliness, and emphasise the complexity and intersectional nature of the circumstances severely lonely young adults live in.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | Loneliness, Social Support, Mental Health, Personality |
Subjects: | Q Science > Q Science (General) |
Faculty / School / Research Centre / Research Group: | Faculty of Education, Health & Human Sciences |
Last Modified: | 18 Apr 2023 13:29 |
URI: | http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/41457 |
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