Did Social Connection Decline During the First Wave of COVID-19?: The Role of Extraversion
Author(s) -
Dunigan Parker Folk,
Karynna OkabeMiyamoto,
Elizabeth W. Dunn,
Sonja Lyubomirsky
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
collabra psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.444
H-Index - 10
ISSN - 2474-7394
DOI - 10.1525/collabra.365
Subject(s) - feeling , covid-19 , pandemic , extraversion and introversion , connection (principal bundle) , psychology , exploratory research , social psychology , demography , sociology , medicine , big five personality traits , personality , social science , virology , disease , structural engineering , pathology , outbreak , infectious disease (medical specialty) , engineering
In two pre-registered studies, we tracked changes in individuals’ feelings of social connection during the COVID-19 pandemic. Both studies capitalized on measures of social connection and well-being obtained prior to the COVID-19 pandemic by recruiting the same participants again in the midst of the pandemic’s upending effects. Study 1 included a sample of undergraduates from a Canadian university (N = 467), and Study 2 included community adults primarily from the United States and the United Kingdom (N = 336). Our results suggest that people experienced relatively little change in feelings of social connection in the face of the initial reshaping of their social lives caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Exploratory analyses suggested that relatively extraverted individuals exhibited larger declines in social connection. However, after controlling for levels of social connection prior to the pandemic (as pre-registered), the negative effect of extraversion reversed (Study 1) or disappeared (Study 2).
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