AI Article Synopsis

  • Research indicates that perceived social support enhances emotional well-being, particularly through positive affectivity linked to friends and family, while negative affectivity is more tied to personality traits than relational factors.
  • The study analyzed data from 1,124 participants in the U.S., revealing that negative affectivity correlated positively with neuroticism and negatively with conscientiousness, rather than with perceived relational support or strain.
  • Exploratory analyses from a separate dataset in Japan suggest that while relationship dynamics may differ cross-culturally, perceived support generally boosts positive emotions rather than solely reducing negative ones.

Article Abstract

Research suggests that perceived social support bolsters emotional well-being. We tested whether perceived support from friends, family, and spouses/partners was associated with reduced negative and greater positive affectivity (i.e., everyday affective baseline), and whether perceived strain in these relationships had opposite effects, accounting for age and relevant covariates. Using data from the third waves of the Midlife in the United States survey and National Study of Daily Experience ( = 1,124), we found negative affectivity was not tied to relational support nor strain, but instead was associated positively with neuroticism and negatively with conscientiousness. In contrast, positive affectivity was related positively to support from friends and family, conscientiousness, and extroversion, and negatively to strain among partners and neuroticism. Exploratory analyses within second-wave Midlife in Japan data ( = 657) suggest patterns for future cross-cultural study. Some relationship dynamics may vary, but perceived support might enhance emotional well-being by bolstering positive, rather than mitigating negative, emotionality.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/01461672231224991DOI Listing

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