• Why some friends make you feel more supp

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Wed Oct 7 21:30:46 2020
    Why some friends make you feel more supported than others
    People feel most backed when their network is connected

    Date:
    October 7, 2020
    Source:
    Ohio State University
    Summary:
    It's good to have friends and family to back you up when you need
    it - but it's even better if your supporters are close with each
    other too, a new set of studies suggests. Researchers found that
    people perceived they had more support from a group of friends or
    family who all knew and liked each other than from an identical
    number of close relationships who were not linked.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    It's good to have friends and family to back you up when you need it --
    but it's even better if your supporters are close with each other too,
    a new set of studies suggests.


    ========================================================================== Researchers found that people perceived they had more support from a
    group of friends or family who all knew and liked each other than from
    an identical number of close relationships who were not linked.

    The results suggest that having a network of people to lean on is only
    part of what makes social support so beneficial to us, said David Lee,
    who led the study as a postdoctoral fellow in psychology at The Ohio
    State University.

    "The more cohesive, the more dense this network you have, the more you
    feel you can rely on them for support," said Lee, who is now an assistant professor of communication at the University at Buffalo.

    "It matters if your friends can depend on each other, just like you depend
    on them." Lee conducted the study with Joseph Bayer, assistant professor
    of communication, and Jonathan Stahl, graduate student in psychology,
    both at Ohio State. Their research was published online recently in the
    journal Social Psychology Quarterly.



    ==========================================================================
    The researchers conducted two online studies.

    In one study, 339 people were asked to list eight people in their lives
    that they could go to for support in the last six months. Participants
    rated on a scale of 1 to 7 how much support they received from each
    person. (Most were listed as friends or family members, but some people
    also named co-workers, romantic partners, classmates or roommates).

    Crucially for this study, participants were also asked to rate on a scale
    of 1 to 7 how close each possible pair of their eight supporters were
    to each other (from "they don't know each other" to "extremely close.")
    Based on those answers, the researchers calculated the density of each participant's network -- the closer and more interconnected their friends
    and family were to each other, the denser the network.

    Results showed that the denser the networks, the more support that
    participants said they would be able to receive from them.



    ==========================================================================
    "We found that our support networks are more than the sum of their parts,"
    said Bayer, who is a core faculty of Ohio State's Translational Data
    Analytics Institute.

    "People who feel they have more social support in their lives may
    be focusing more on the collective support they feel from being part
    of a strong, cohesive group. It's having a real crew, as opposed to
    just having a set of friends." A second study, involving 240 people,
    examined whether the density of a social network mattered in a specific situation where people needed help.

    In this case, participants were asked to list two different groups of four people they could go to if they needed support. One group comprised four
    people who were not close to one another and the other group consisted
    of four people who were close with each other.

    Participants were then asked to imagine a scenario in which their house
    had been broken into and they went to their network for support.

    Half the people were told to think about going to the four people who
    were not close to one another, while the other half imagined reaching
    out to their four connected supporters.

    Results showed that those who imagined going to their tight-knit group
    of friends or family perceived that they would receive more support than
    did participants who thought about going to their unconnected friends.

    The results also offered preliminary evidence of two psychological
    mechanisms that could help explain why people feel better supported by
    a tight-knit group of friends.

    In answers to survey questions, participants suggested that they
    thought of their group of close friends or family as one entity. They
    also were more likely to see a closer-knit group as part of their own identities. Both of these factors were related to perceiving more support, results showed.

    The researchers said the results of both studies show it isn't just the
    number of friends and family you have in your network that is important.

    "You can have two friends who are both very supportive of you, but if
    they are both friends with each other, that makes you feel even more supported," Stahl said.

    On a practical level, that means it is important which friends we think
    about when we most need help or when we are feeling lonely in the midst
    of daily life.

    "Focus on those friends who are connected to each other," Bayer
    said. "That's where we really perceive the most support."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Ohio_State_University. Original
    written by Jeff Grabmeier. Note: Content may be edited for style and
    length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. David S. Lee, Jonathan L. Stahl, Joseph B. Bayer. Social Resources
    as
    Cognitive Structures: Thinking about a Dense Support Network
    Increases Perceived Support. Social Psychology Quarterly, 2020;
    019027252093950 DOI: 10.1177/0190272520939506 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/10/201007085609.htm

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