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      A Short Scale for Measuring Loneliness in Large Surveys : Results From Two Population-Based Studies

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          Abstract

          Most studies of social relationships in later life focus on the amount of social contact, not on individuals’perceptions of social isolation. However, loneliness is likely to be an important aspect of aging. A major limiting factor in studying loneliness has been the lack of a measure suitable for large-scale social surveys. This article describes a short loneliness scale developed specifically for use on a telephone survey. The scale has three items and a simplified set of response categories but appears to measure overall loneliness quite well. The authors also document the relationship between loneliness and several commonly used measures of objective social isolation. As expected, they find that objective and subjective isolation are related. However, the relationship is relatively modest, indicating that the quantitative and qualitative aspects of social relationships are distinct. This result suggests the importance of studying both dimensions of social relationships in the aging process.

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          Most cited references32

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          The need to belong: Desire for interpersonal attachments as a fundamental human motivation.

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            The revised UCLA Loneliness Scale: concurrent and discriminant validity evidence.

            The development of an adequate assessment instrument is a necessary prerequisite for social psychological research on loneliness. Two studies provide methodological refinement in the measurement of loneliness. Study 1 presents a revised version of the self-report UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) Loneliness Scale, designed to counter the possible effects of response bias in the original scale, and reports concurrent validity evidence for the revised measure. Study 2 demonstrates that although loneliness is correlated with measures of negative affect, social risk taking, and affiliative tendencies, it is nonetheless a distinct psychological experience.
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              Taking time seriously: A theory of socioemotional selectivity.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Research on Aging
                Res Aging
                SAGE Publications
                0164-0275
                1552-7573
                November 2004
                August 19 2016
                November 2004
                : 26
                : 6
                : 655-672
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Duke University
                [2 ]University of Chicago
                Article
                10.1177/0164027504268574
                2394670
                18504506
                541b818e-7915-4759-9473-83900638d22f
                © 2004

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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