AI Article Synopsis

  • A study surveyed over 1,100 individuals about their relationships, revealing that about 15% of their connections included people they found demanding or difficult, with close family members being the most cited examples.
  • The findings suggest that social norms and responsibilities, especially towards kin like aging parents and women relatives, often compel people to maintain these challenging relationships.
  • Interestingly, providing support to these difficult individuals increased the sense of burden, regardless of whether support was received in return, indicating that such one-sided dynamics contribute to the perception of difficulty in these connections.

Article Abstract

Why do people maintain ties with individuals whom they find difficult? Standard network theories imply that such alters are avoided or dropped. Drawing on a survey of over 1,100 diverse respondents who described over 12,000 relationships, we examined which among those ties respondents nominated as a person whom they "sometimes find demanding or difficult." Those so listed composed about 15 percent of all alters in the network. After holding ego and alter traits constant, close kin, especially women relatives and aging parents, were especially likely to be named as difficult alters. Non-kin described as friends were less, and those described as co-workers more, likely to be listed only as difficult alters. These results suggest that normative and institutional constraints may force people to retain difficult and demanding alters in their networks. We also found that providing support to alters, but not receiving support from those alters, was a major source of difficulty in these relationships. Furthermore, the felt burden of providing support was not attenuated by receiving assistance, suggesting that alters involved in reciprocated exchanges were not less often labeled difficult than were those in unreciprocated ones. This study underlines the importance of constraints in personal networks.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5937537PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0003122417737951DOI Listing

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