| Literature DB >> 35001994 |
Ellie Pearce1, Manuela Barreto2, Christina Victor3, Claudia Hammond4, Alice M Eccles5, Matthew T Richins2, Alisha O'Neil5, Megan L Knowles6, Pamela Qualter5.
Abstract
Previous experimental work showed that young adults reporting loneliness performed less well on emotion recognition tasks (Diagnostic Analysis of Nonverbal Accuracy [DANVA-2]) if they were framed as indicators of social aptitude, but not when the same tasks were framed as indexing academic aptitude. Such findings suggested that undergraduates reporting loneliness possessed the social monitoring skills necessary to read the emotions underlying others' facial expressions, but that they choked under social pressure. It has also been found that undergraduates reporting loneliness have better recall for both positive and negative social information than their non-lonely counterparts. Whether those effects are evident across different age groups has not been examined. Using data from the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) Loneliness Experiment that included participants aged 16-99 years (N = 54,060), we (i) test for replication in a larger worldwide sample and (ii) extend those linear model analyses to other age groups. We found only effects for participants aged 25-34 years: In this age group, loneliness was associated with increased recall of negative individual information, and with choking under social pressure during the emotion recognition task; those effects were small. We did not find any such effects among participants in other age groups. Our findings suggest that different cognitive processes may be associated with loneliness in different age groups, highlighting the importance of life-course approaches in this area.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive bias; emotion recognition; loneliness; social cognitions; social skills
Year: 2020 PMID: 35001994 PMCID: PMC8727830 DOI: 10.1177/0165025420979369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Dev ISSN: 0165-0254
Descriptive Statistics for Male and Female Participants for Memory Task Sample.
|
| Minimum | Maximum | Mean |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Age | 1,291 | 16.00 | 99.00 | 47.18 | 18.65 | |
| Lonelinessa | 1,291 | 4.00 | 20.00 | 11.13 | 4.61 | |
| Recall scores for different types of events | Individual positive | 1,291 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.35 | 0.53 |
| Individual negative | 1,291 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.31 | 0.58 | |
| Interpersonal positive | 1,291 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.19 | 0.47 | |
| Interpersonal negative | 1,291 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.33 | 0.66 | |
| Collective positive | 1,291 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.15 | 0.43 | |
| Collective negative | 1,291 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.21 | 0.53 | |
| Females | ||||||
| Age | 1,341 | 16.00 | 99.00 | 48.65 | 19.23 | |
| Loneliness (raw scores) | 1,341 | 4.00 | 20.00 | 10.43 | 4.57 | |
| Recall scores for different types of events | Individual positive | 1,341 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.34 | 0.51 |
| Individual negative | 1,341 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.33 | 0.61 | |
| Interpersonal positive | 1,341 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.23 | 0.51 | |
| Interpersonal negative | 1,341 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.33 | 0.63 | |
| Collective positive | 1,341 | 0.00 | 3.00 | 0.14 | 0.41 | |
| Collective negative | 1,341 | 0.00 | 4.00 | 0.25 | 0.56 | |
Note. N = sample size; SD = standard deviation.
a Total raw scores on the 4-item UCLA scales, not z-scores: possible total scores range from 1–20; participants are asked to rate how often they felt (i) a lack of companionship, (ii) left out, (iii) isolated from others, and (iv) in tune with others (reverse scored) on a 5-point scale anchored from “never” (1) and to “very often” (5). Higher scores on the 4-item UCLA represented higher loneliness (α = .845). In the social memory task, participants read four short extracts from a diary for an individual of the same sex; after reading the diary, they listed as many events as they could remember from the diary. Two coders, blind to the participants’ loneliness scores, categorized responses as (i) individual events that were positive (e.g., I played a chess match and won), (ii) individual events that were negative (e.g., when cycling to the office, I fell off my bike and hurt my head), (iii) interpersonal events that were positive (e.g., I received a parcel from my cousin [who I am very close to] and it was full of hilarious pictures from our last holiday together), (iv) interpersonal events that were negative (e.g., my best friend let me down: we had made plans to do something at the weekend, but I guess it didn’t matter), (v) collective events that were positive (e.g., my office has got cinema tickets for our good productivity results), and (vi) collective events that were negative (e.g., my group entered a poster competition and we just found out we didn’t win a prize). In the diary, there had been four instances of each kind of event, so there was a maximum of four correct responses for each event. Scores for the number of correctly remembered events were summed for each of the six categories.
Descriptive Statistics for Male and Female Participants for Emotion Recognition Task Sample.
| N | Minimum | Maximum | Mean | SD | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Males | ||||||
| Age | 7,159 | 16.00 | 99.00 | 49.29 | 15.70 | |
| Lonelinessa | 7,159 | 1.00 | 20.00 | 10.89 | 4.58 | |
| DANVA-2 scores | Total | 7,159 | 1.00 | 24.00 | 17.65 | 2.96 |
| Low intensity | 7,158 | 1.00 | 12.00 | 7.63 | 1.78 | |
| Low intensity Fear | 6,517 | 1.00 | 3.00 | 1.86 | .69 | |
| Low intensity Anger | 5,611 | 1.00 | 3.00 | 1.69 | .74 | |
| Low intensity Sad | 6,995 | 1.00 | 3.00 | 2.38 | .70 | |
| Low intensity Happy | 7,087 | 1.00 | 3.00 | 2.31 | .69 | |
| Females | ||||||
| Age | 14,895 | 16.00 | 96.00 | 49.70 | 15.23 | |
| Lonelinessa | 14,895 | 1.00 | 20.00 | 10.28 | 4.46 | |
| DANVA-2 scores | Total | 14,895 | 2.00 | 24.00 | 18.45 | 2.71 |
| Low intensity | 14,895 | 1.00 | 12.00 | 8.04 | 1.69 | |
| Low intensity Fear | 14,050 | 1.00 | 3.00 | 1.94 | .69 | |
| Low intensity Anger | 12,157 | 1.00 | 3.00 | 1.75 | .75 | |
| Low intensity Sad | 14,694 | 1.00 | 3.00 | 2.54 | .64 | |
| Low intensity Happy | 14,716 | 1.00 | 3.00 | 2.31 | .68 | |
Note. N = sample size; SD = standard deviation.
aTotal raw scores on the 4-item UCLA scale, not z-scores; possible total scores for the total 4-item scale range from 1 to 20; participants are asked to rate how often they felt (i) a lack of companionship, (ii) left out, (iii) isolated from others, and (iv) in tune with others (reverse scored) on a 5-point scale anchored from “never” (1) and to “very often” (5). Higher scores on the 4-item UCLA represented higher loneliness (α = .845). The DANVA-2 includes photos of 24 male and female young adult faces, and those faces were presented individually, for 2 s. Participant were asked to choose which emotion best characterizes the expression of the depicted face (happy, fearful, angry, or sad). There are six faces for each emotion, and three of those are “low intensity,” where the emotion is subtler and, therefore, harder to detect, than in the three “high-intensity” pictures. Of the 13 female faces, 8 show low intensity emotions (two each for all four emotions); 4 of the 11 male faces show low intensity emotion (one each for all four emotions). For the high-intensity emotions, there are two male faces and one female face for each of the emotions except anger, which is the opposite.
General Linear Model, Using Restricted Maximum Likelihood, Predicting Performance on Memory Task.
| Estimate | 95% CI | Converted | Degree of freedom |
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full model for memory taske | ||||||
| Intercept | 0.189 | .013 to.365 | .239 | 14,970 | 2.091 | 0.037* |
| Lonelinessa | 0.215 | .038 to .391 | .265 | 14,120 | 2.385 | 0.017* |
| Eventb | 0.060 | −.138 to .018 | .110 | 13,150 | 1.494 | 0.135 |
| Valencec | 0.096 | −.204 to .011 | .146 | 13,150 | 1.743 | 0.081 |
| Age | 0.002 | −.001 to .005 | .052 | 14,120 | 1.432 | 0.152 |
| Genderd | 0.013 | −.013 to .038 | .063 | 2,627 | 1.049 | 0.294 |
| Loneliness × Event | −0.089 | −.169 to .009 | .139 | 13150 | −2.159 | 0.031* |
| Loneliness × Valence | −0.119 | −.229 to .009 | .169 | 13,150 | −2.106 | 0.035* |
| Event × Valence | −0.067 | −.118 to −.016 | −.117 | 13,150 | −2.608 | 0.009** |
| Loneliness × Age | −0.003 | −.007 to .001 | −.053 | 14,120 | −1.878 | 0.060 |
| Event × Age | −0.001 | −.003 to .001 | −.051 | 13,150 | −1.228 | 0.219 |
| Valence × Age | −0.001 | −.003 to .001 | −.051 | 13,150 | −0.842 | 0.400 |
| Loneliness × Event × Valence | 0.050 | −.001 to .101 | .100 | 13,150 | 1.916 | 0.055 |
| Loneliness × Event × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .002 | .051 | 13,150 | 1.832 | 0.067 |
| Loneliness × Valence × Age | 0.002 | −.00004 to −.004 | .052 | 13,150 | 1.649 | 0.099 |
| Event × Valence × Age | 0.002 | −.002 to .002 | .052 | 13,150 | 0.409 | 0.682 |
| Loneliness × Event × Valence × Age | 0.001 | −.002 to .002 | .051 | 13,150 | −1.651 | 0.099 |
| Negatively valenced events onlyf | ||||||
| Intercept | 0.273 | −.173 to .373 | .323 | 7,381 | 5.338 | 9.69e-08*** |
| Lonelinessa | 0.097 | .009 to .185 | .147 | 7,790 | 2.132 | 0.033* |
| Eventb | −0.006 | −.043 to .031 | −.056 | 5,260 | −0.333 | 0.739 |
| Age | 0.002 | .00004 to .004 | .052 | 7,790 | 1.793 | 0.073 |
| Genderd | 0.021 | −.014 to .056 | .071 | 2,627 | 1.246 | 0.213 |
| Loneliness × Event | −0.039 | −.076 to −.002 | −.089 | 5,260 | −2.027 | 0.043* |
| Loneliness × Age | −0.001 | −.003 to −.001 | −.051 | 7,789 | −1.686 | 0.092 |
| Event × Age | −0.001 | −.003 to .001 | −.051 | 5,260 | −2.076 | 0.038* |
| Loneliness × Event × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .003 | −.051 | 5,260 | 1.686 | 0.092 |
| Positively valenced events onlyg | ||||||
| Intercept | 0.393 | .307 to .472 | .442 | 7,872 | 9.401 | <2e-16*** |
| Lonelinessa | −0.022 | −.085 to .041 | −.072 | 7,324 | −0.584 | 0.559 |
| Eventb | −0.073 | −.106 to −.040 | −.123 | 5,260 | −4.334 | 1.49e-05*** |
| Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .003 | .052 | 7,324 | 0.899 | 0.369 |
| Genderd | 0.005 | −.0185 to .029 | .055 | 2,627 | 0.423 | 0.672 |
| Loneliness × Event | 0.011 | −.022 to .044 | .061 | 5,260 | 0.637 | 0.524 |
| Loneliness × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .003 | .051 | 7,323 | 0.426 | 0.670 |
| Event × Age | −0.001 | −.003 to .001 | −.051 | 5,260 | −1.706 | 0.088 |
| Loneliness × Event × Age | −0.001 | −.001 to .003 | −.051 | 5,260 | −0.617 | 0.537 |
Note. N = 1,291 males and 1,341 females.
a Loneliness z-scores, created from the total raw scores on the 4-item UCLA scales, where possible total scores range from 1 to 20; participants are asked to rate how often they felt (i) a lack of companionship, (ii) left out, (iii) isolated from others, and (iv) in tune with others (reverse scored) on a 5-point scale anchored from “never” (1) and to “very often” (5). Higher scores on the 4-item UCLA represented higher loneliness (α = .845). In the social memory task, participants read four short extracts from a diary for an individual of the same sex; after reading the diary, they listed as many events as they could remember from the diary. Two coders, blind to the participants’ loneliness scores, categorized responses as (i) individual events that were positive (e.g., I played a chess match and won), (ii) individual events that were negative (e.g., when cycling to the office, I fell off my bike and hurt my head), (iii) interpersonal events that were positive (e.g., I received a parcel from my cousin (who I am very close to) and it was full of hilarious pictures from our last holiday together), (iv) interpersonal events that were negative (e.g., my best friend let me down: we had made plans to do something at the weekend, but I guess it didn’t matter), (v) collective events that were positive (e.g., my office has got cinema tickets for our good productivity results), and (vi) collective events that were negative (e.g., my group entered a poster competition and we just found out we didn’t win a prize). In the diary, there had been four instances of each kind of event, so there was a maximum of four correct responses for each event. Scores for the number of correctly remembered events were summed for each of the six categories. For analyses, we created categorizes of bEvent type (individual, interpersonal or collective) and cValence (positive or negative); d1 = Male, 2 = Female; eRestricted (residual) maximum likelihood (REML)= 24,198.51; fRestricted (residual) maximum likelihood (REML) = 13673.10; gRestricted (residual) maximum likelihood (REML)= 10,733.30.
*p <.05; **p < .01; ***p < .0001.
Linear Model Predicting Memory Task Performance from Loneliness and Gender for Different Kinds of Events in Age Groups for Which Loneliness had a Significant Effect.
| Estimate | 95% CI | Converted |
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25- to 34-year-olds | |||||
| Negative individual eventsa | |||||
| Intercept | 0.230 | .063 to .397 | .28 | 2.717 | 0.007** |
| Lonelinessb | 0.109 | .054 to .164 | .159 | 3.921 | 0.0001 *** |
| Genderc | 0.030 | −.076 to .136 | .080 | 0.553 | 0.580 |
Note. N = 1,291 males and 1,341 females.
aOverall model: F(2,397) = 7.700, p = 0.0005.
bLoneliness z-scores, created from the total raw scores on the 4-item UCLA scales, where possible total scores range from 1 to 20; participants are asked to rate how often they felt (i) a lack of companionship, (ii) left out, (iii) isolated from others, and (iv) in tune with others (reverse scored) on a 5-point scale anchored from “never” (1) and to “very often” (5). Higher scores on the 4-item UCLA represented higher loneliness (α = .845). In the social memory task, participants read four short extracts from a diary for an individual of the same sex; after reading the diary, they listed as many events as they could remember from the diary. Two coders, blind to the participants’ loneliness scores, categorized responses. Here responses coded as (ii) individual events that were negative (e.g., when cycling to the office, I fell off my bike and hurt my head) were examined. In the diary, there had been four instances of each kind of event, so there was a maximum of four correct responses for individual negative events.
c1 = Male, 2 = Female.
** p < .01; ***p < .0001.
Linear Regression Model Predicting Emotion Recognition (DANVA-2) Scores Across all Ages.
| Coefficients | Variance explained in each step | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | 95% CI |
|
| Δ |
| |
| Full DANVA-2 set of facesd | ||||||
| Intercept | 18.075 | 17.662 to 18.488 | ||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.137 | −.536 to 2.63 | .039 | .002 | .002 | 33.444, |
| Conditionb | −0.061 | −.309 to .187 | .045 | .002 | .001 | 11.226, |
| Age | −0.029 | −.039 to −.024 | .131 | .017 | .015 | 339.277, |
| Genderc | 0.800 | .721 to .878 | .186 | .035 | .018 | 400.606, |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.090 | −.343 to .164 | .186 | .035 | .000 | 1.224, |
| Loneliness × Age | 0.001 | −.006 to .009 | .187 | .035 | .000 | 5.479, |
| Condition × Age | 0.004 | −.001 to .009 | .187 | .035 | .000 | 2.844, |
| Loneliness × Condition × Age | 0.001 | −.004 to .006 | .187 | .035 | .000 | .195, |
| Low intensity set of DANVA-2 facese | ||||||
| Intercept | 7.195 | 6.939 to 7.451 | ||||
| Lonelinessa | 0.029 | −.219 to .276 | .036 | .001 | .001 | 28.870, |
| Conditionb | 0.008 | −.146 to .162 | .044 | .002 | .001 | 14.417, |
| Age | −0.002 | −.007 to .003 | .045 | .002 | .000 | 1.318, |
| Genderc | 0.399 | .349 to .447 | .117 | .014 | .012 | 258.632, |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.108 | −.265 to .049 | .117 | .014 | .000 | .480, |
| Loneliness × Age | −0.001 | −.006 to .004 | .118 | .014 | .000 | 4.674, |
| Condition × Age | 0.002 | −.001 to .005 | .118 | .014 | .000 | 1.342, |
| Loneliness × Condition × Age | 0.002 | −.001 to .005 | .118 | .014 | .000 | 1.508, |
| Low intensity set of DANVA-2 faces—Fearf | ||||||
| Intercept | 1.569 | 1.463 to 1.674 | ||||
| Lonelinessa | 0.074 | −.029 to .177 | .004 | .000 | .000 | .299, |
| Conditionb | 0.052 | −.011 to .116 | .017 | .000 | .000 | 5.452, |
| Age | 0.004 | .002 to .005 | .061 | .003 | .003 | 72.008, |
| Genderc | 0.081 | .061 to .101 | .082 | .003 | .003 | 62.078, |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.041 | −.106 to .025 | .083 | .000 | .000 | 1.695, |
| Loneliness × Age | −0.001 | −.003 to .001 | .083 | .000 | .000 | .297, |
| Condition × Age | −0.001 | −.002 to .001 | .083 | .000 | .000 | .890, |
| Loneliness × Condition × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .002 | .083 | .000 | .000 | .724, |
| Low intensity set of DANVA-2 faces—Angerg | ||||||
| Intercept | 1.521 | 1.397 to 1.645 | ||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.051 | −.171 to .070 | .021 | .000 | .000 | 7.662, |
| Conditionb | −0.010 | −.084 to .064 | .023 | .001 | .000 | 1.677, |
| Age | 0.002 | .000 to .004 | .060 | .004 | .003 | 55.405, |
| Genderc | 0.054 | .031 to .078 | .060 | .005 | .001 | 20.530, |
| Loneliness × Condition | 0.015 | −.061 to .091 | .070 | .005 | .000 | 3.190, |
| Loneliness × Age | 0.001 | −.002 to .003 | .071 | .005 | .000 | 1.096, |
| Condition × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .002 | .071 | .005 | .000 | .460, |
| Loneliness × Condition × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .002 | .071 | .005 | .000 | .029, |
| Low intensity set of DANVA-2 faces—Sadnessh | ||||||
| Intercept | 2.390 | 2.291 to 2.488 | ||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.009 | −.104 to .086 | .021 | .000 | .000 | 9.467, |
| Conditionb | 0.008 | −.051 to .067 | .024 | .001 | .001 | 3.364, |
| Age | −0.004 | −.006 to −.002 | .084 | .007 | .006 | 140.068, |
| Genderc | 0.154 | .136 to .173 | .137 | .019 | .012 | 262.602, |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.021 | −.081 to .039 | .138 | .019 | .000 | 1.267, |
| Loneliness × Age | 0.001 | −.002 to .002 | .138 | .019 | .000 | 3.006, |
| Condition × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .001 | .138 | .019 | .000 | .149, |
| Loneliness × Condition × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .001 | .138 | .019 | .000 | .147, |
| Low intensity set of DANVA-2 faces—Happinessi | ||||||
| Intercept | 2.354 | 2.251 to 2.456 | ||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.042 | −.141 to .057 | .035 | .001 | .001 | 27.075, |
| Conditionb | −0.032 | −.093 to .029 | .035 | .001 | .000 | .213, |
| Age | −0.001 | −.003 to .001 | .036 | .001 | .000 | 1.176, |
| Genderc | −0.007 | −.027 to .012 | .036 | .001 | .000 | .518, |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.009 | −.072 to .054 | .036 | .001 | .000 | .000, |
| Loneliness × Age | 0.001 | −.002 to .002 | .039 | .002 | .001 | 4.320, |
| Condition × Age | 0.001 | −.0002 to .002 | .040 | .002 | .000 | 1.485, |
| Loneliness × Condition × Age | 0.001 | −.001 to .001 | .040 | .002 | .000 | .115, |
Note. Estimates are unstandardized β co-efficient.
aLoneliness measured using 4-item UCLA loneliness measure transformed into z-scores: participants were asked to rate how often they felt (i) a lack of companionship, (ii) left out, (iii) isolated from others, and (iv) in tune with others (reverse scored) on a 5-point scale anchored from “never” (1) and to “very often” (5). Higher scores on the 4-item UCLA represented higher loneliness (α = .845).
b1 = nonsocial framing, 2 = social framing: participants were randomly assigned to either a non-social framing condition (N = 11,089) or a social framing condition (N = 10,965), and then they completed the emotion recognition task (DANVA-2). The DANVA-2 includes photos of 24 male and female young adult faces, and those faces were presented individually, for 2 s. Participant were asked to choose which emotion best characterizes the expression of the depicted face (happy, fearful, angry, or sad). There are six faces for each emotion, and three of those are “low intensity,” where the emotion is subtler and, therefore, harder to detect, than in the three “high–intensity” pictures. Of the 13 female faces, 8 show low-intensity emotions (two each for all four emotions); 4 of the 11 male faces show low-intensity emotion (one each for all four emotions). For the high-intensity emotions, there are two male faces and one female face for each of the emotions except anger, which is the opposite.
c1 = Male, 2 = Female.
d N = 7,159 males and 14,895 females, overall model F(8,22045) = 100.30, p < 2.2e-16***.
e N = 7,159 males and 14,895 females, overall model F(8,22044)= 38.98, p < 2.2e-16***.
f N = 6,517 males and 14,050 females, overall model F(8,20558)= 17.96, p < 2.2e-16***.
g N = 5,611 males and 12,157 females, overall model F(8,17759)= 11.27, p = 4.787e-16***.
h N = 6,995 males and 14,694 females, overall model F(8,21680) = 52.75, p < 2.2e-16***.
i N = 7,087 males and 14,716 females, overall model F(8,21794) = 4.363, p = 2.81e-05***.
* p < .05; ***p < .01; **p < .001.
Linear Regression Models Predicting Total and Low-Intensity-Only Emotion Recognition (DANVA-2) Scores for all Emotions Combined in the Different Age Groups.
| Dependent variable | Coefficients | Variance explained in each step | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | 95% CI | |
| Δ |
| ||
| 16- to 24-year-olds | |||||||
| Total DANVA-2 scoresd | |||||||
| Intercept | 17.126 | 16.461 to 17.790 | |||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.600 | −1.062 to .131 | .076 | .006 | .006 | 9.008, | |
| Framing conditionb | −0.275 | −.561 to .012 | .085 | .007 | .001 | 2.331, | |
| Genderc | 0.973 | .689 to 1.266 | .184 | .034 | .027 | 43.196, | |
| Loneliness × Condition | 0.247 | −.049 to.542 | .188 | .035 | .002 | 2.685, | |
| Low-intensity DANVA-2 scorese | |||||||
| Intercept | 6.992 | 6.584 to 7.399 | |||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.232 | −.517 to .055 | .066 | .004 | .004 | 6.884, | |
| Framing conditionb | −0.120 | −.296 to .056 | .072 | .005 | .001 | 1.370, | |
| Genderc | 0.513 | −.334 to .693 | .158 | .025 | .020 | 31.716, | |
| Loneliness × Condition | 0.073 | −.108 to .254 | .159 | .025 | .000 | .629, | |
| 25- to 34-year-olds | |||||||
| Total DANVA-2 scoresf | |||||||
| Intercept | 16.820 | 16.358 to 17.283 | |||||
| Lonelinessa | 0.282 | −.037 to .599 | .057 | .003 | .003 | 9.266, | |
| Framing conditionb | 0.096 | −.099 to .291 | .059 | .003 | .000 | .691, | |
| Genderc | 1.026 | −.819 | .188 | .035 | .032 | 94.056, | |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.257 | −.459 to .054 | .193 | .035 | .002 | 6.183, | |
| Low-intensity DANVA-2 scoresg | |||||||
| Intercept | 6.740 | 6.44 to 7.036 | |||||
| Lonelinessa | 0.247 | .043 to .450 | .032 | .001 | .001 | 2.998, | |
| Framing conditionb | 0.070 | −.055 to .194 | .037 | .001 | .001 | .894, | |
| Genderc | 0.621 | .488 to .754 | .173 | .030 | .029 | 83.904, | |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.181 | .006 | .180 | .032 | .003 | 7.464, | |
| 35- to 64-year-olds | |||||||
| Total DANVA-2 scoreh | |||||||
| Intercept | 16.755 | 16.530 to 16.980 | |||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.058 | −.203 to .087 | .048 | .002 | .002 | 31.527, | |
| Framing conditionb | 0.2073 | .114 to .300 | .059 | .004 | .001 | 16.766, | |
| Genderc | 0.725 | .625 to .825 | .134 | .018 | .014 | 201.424, | |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.036 | −.128 to .056 | .134 | .018 | .000 | .586, | |
| Low-intensity DANVA-2 scoresi | |||||||
| Intercept | 7.203 | 7.065 to 7.341 | |||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.047 | −.136 to .042 | .037 | .001 | .001 | 18.298, | |
| Framing conditionb | 0.126 | .068 to .163 | .051 | .003 | .001 | 16.827, | |
| Genderc | 0.356 | .295 to .418 | .109 | .012 | .009 | 128.735, | |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.003 | −.060 to .053 | .109 | .012 | .000 | .013, | |
| 65+ years-old | |||||||
| Total DANVA-2 scoresj | |||||||
| Intercept | 16.001 | 15.578 to 16.424 | |||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.104 | −.386 to .179 | .050 | .003 | .003 | 9.973, | |
| Framing conditionb | 0.096 | −.083 to .275 | .053 | .003 | .000 | .993, | |
| Genderc | 0.783 | .596 to .970 | .140 | .020 | .017 | 67.616, | |
| Loneliness × Condition | −0.017 | −.195 to .162 | .140 | .020 | .000 | .034, | |
| Low-intensity DANVA-2 scoresk | |||||||
| Intercept | 7.115 | 6.853 to 7.377 | |||||
| Lonelinessa | −0.078 | −.253 to .097 | .033 | .001 | .001 | 4.387, | |
| Framing conditionb | 0.089 | −.022 to .199 | .041 | .002 | .001 | 2.125, | |
| Genderc | 0.313 | .197 to .429 | .094 | .009 | .007 | 28.242, | |
| Loneliness × Condition | 0.017 | −.93 to .128 | .094 | .009 | .000 | .095, | |
Note. Estimates are unstandardized β co-efficient.
aLoneliness measured using 4-item UCLA loneliness measure transformed into z-scores: participants were asked to rate how often they felt (i) a lack of companionship, (ii) left out, (iii) isolated from others, and (iv) in tune with others (reverse scored) on a 5-point scale anchored from “never” (1) and to “very often” (5). Higher scores on the 4-item UCLA represented higher loneliness (α = .845).
b1 = nonsocial framing, 2 = social framing: participants were randomly assigned to either a non-social framing condition (N = 11,089) or a social framing condition (N = 10,965), and then they completed the emotion recognition task (DANVA-2). The DANVA-2 includes photos of 24 male and female young adult faces, and those faces were presented individually, for 2 s. Participant were asked to choose which emotion best characterizes the expression of the depicted face (happy, fearful, angry, or sad). There are six faces for each emotion, and three of those are “low intensity,” where the emotion is subtler and, therefore, harder to detect, than in the three “high–intensity” pictures. Of the 13 female faces, 8 show low-intensity emotions (two each for all four emotions); 4 of the 11 male faces show low-intensity emotion (one each for all four emotions). For the high-intensity emotions, there are two male faces and one female face for each of the emotions except anger, which is the opposite.
c1 = Male, 2 = Female.
d N = 555 males and 1,015 females, overall model: F(4,1565) = 14.40, p = 1.505e-11***.
e N = 555 males and 1,015 females, overall model: F(4,1564) = 10.19, p = 3.829e-08***.
f N = 954 males and 1,905 females, overall model: F(4,2854) = 27.68, p ≤ 2.2e-16***.
g N = 954 males and 1,905 females, overall model: F(4,2854) = 23.89, p ≤ 2.2e-16***.
h N = 4,368 males and 9,325 females, overall model: F(4,13688) =62.76, p ≤ 2.2e-16***.
i N = 4,368 males and 9,325 females, overall model: F(4,13688) = 41.05, p ≤ 2.2e-16***.
j N = 1,282 males and 2,650 females, overall model: F(4,3927) = 19.70, p = 4.572e-16***.
k N = 1,282 males and 2,650 females, overall model: F(4,3927) = 8.72, p = 5.248e-07***.
* p < .05; ***p < .01; **p < .001.