4.2 Article

Relationship Change, Network Change, and the Use of Single Name Generators in Longitudinal Research on Social Support

Journal

FIELD METHODS
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 52-67

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1525822X20958851

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Funding

  1. NSF [SES-0219538]

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As relationships and people change, the roles of support providers within networks can also change, leading to frequent misperceptions if longitudinal studies rely solely on single name generators to capture these changes.
As relationships change and people change the kinds of support they provide, name generators that collect information about ties that provide particular kinds of support at repeated points of time may not effectively capture ties that are active but whose roles have changed. This article shows that a significant minority of network members change the kinds of support they provide. They either discontinue a support previously provided or provide a new type of support. We examine the implications of this finding for longitudinal studies of support networks based on single name generators and show that this practice can result in frequent misperceptions of network membership change.

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