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Loneliness and social skill deficits.
219
Citations
13
References
1982
Year
Social IsolationPartner AttentionSocial PsychologyEducationLonelinessSocial SkillSocial ImpairmentSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologySexual CommunicationIntimate RelationshipSocial Skill DeficitsPersonal RelationshipBehavioral SciencesSocial SkillsApplied Social PsychologyInterpersonal CommunicationSocial BehaviorInterpersonal RelationshipsInterpersonal Attraction
The relationship between social skill deficits and the psychological state of loneliness was examined in two studies. Study 1 compared conversational behaviors of high-lonely and low-lonely college students during brief heterosexual interactions. Results indicated that the two loneliness groups differed significantly in their use of a specific class of conversational behaviors termed partner attention, with high-lonely as compared to low-lonely subjects giving less attention to their partners. Study 2 examined the casual relationship between social skill and loneliness by directly manipulating the use of partner attention in a group of high-lonely males. For that group, increased use of partner attention during dyadic interactions resulted in significantly greater change in loneliness and related variables relative to interaction only and no-contact control groups. The utility of conceptualizing loneliness as a social skills problem is discussed.
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