4.5 Article

Staying happy even when staying 6 ft apart: The relationship between extroversion and social adaptability

Journal

PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES
Volume 190, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2022.111549

Keywords

Extroversion; COVID-19; Need to belong; Social surrogates; Parasocial relationships; Wellbeing; Collective effervescence

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This study examines the impact of extroversion on the use of nontraditional social strategies during the pandemic and finds that extroversion is associated with greater use of these strategies. Moreover, extroversion is also associated with more use of these strategies when traditional social opportunities are limited. These findings suggest that extroverts are likely to seek out and utilize alternative forms of connection to maintain happiness.
COVID-19-related social distancing guidelines pose challenges that may be particularly distressing for those high in extroversion, who tend to experience greater happiness when in social situations (Costa & McCrae, 1980; Emmons & Diener, 1985). Our research sought to examine if extroversion was related to greater use of COVID-19-compliant, nontraditional social strategies (e.g. collective effervescent experiences, social surrogate use, and video-chatting) when social options were limited. We examined residents of New York State before the start of the pandemic, during the peak of the pandemic, and one year after the peak of the pandemic. Using a variety of analytical strategies, we found that extroversion was associated with greater use of nontraditional social strategies during the pandemic, and that use of some of these strategies partly explained a relationship between extroversion and maintaining happiness during the pandemic. Furthermore, extroversion was associated with greater use of some of these strategies only when traditional social opportunities were limited. These findings suggest that extroverts are likely to seek out and utilize unorthodox forms of connection to maintain wellbeing, particularly when other social options are unavailable. This work makes novel contributions to our understanding of extroversion and the flexibility of the need to belong.

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