Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Elaine Weiner , VICKI S. HELGESON , K.D. MICKELSON , Alexis de Tocqueville
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Carnegie Mellon University
ANO 1995
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
ISSN 0265-4075
E-ISSN 1470-8692
DOI 10.1111/j.1475-6811.1995.tb00087.x
CITAÇÕES 3
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 a1c3ebc82c877ae08807fe10cab72d1a
MD5 ccb26867c317680fe6bf102c118ddb16
MD5 1dfe99aa736f4d2e3979f2bd07cd87ea

Resumo

This study was conducted to examine the influence of gender on social support provision and receipt using both self‐report and observational methodologies. In response to another person sharing a problem, we predicted that men would be more likely than women to provide advice, and women would be more likely than men to provide emotional support. We also predicted women would be more likely than men to receive emotional support, and men would be more likely than women to receive negative support. Sixty‐one pairs of college students, same‐sex and mixed‐sex dyads, shared a problem with each other. Problem‐sharing transactions were audiotaped and transcribed for content analysis. Opposite‐sex providers offered more emotional support than did same‐sex providers, whereas same‐sex providers listened more than did opposite‐sex providers. No gender differences were found for advice‐giving. Men were more likely than women to receive negative support. These results suggest that gender composition of the dyad has a greater influence on support provision and receipt than provider or recipient gender alone.

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