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Social Skills,Social Support,and Psychological Distress: A Test of the Social Skills Deficit Vulnerability Model
Authors:Chris Segrin  Melissa McNelis  Paulina Swiatkowski
Affiliation:Department of Communication, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA
Abstract:The social skills deficit vulnerability model predicts that poor social skills minimize opportunities to acquire social support, in turn, leading to the proliferation of psychological distress. This prediction was tested in a 2‐wave longitudinal study that assessed 211 emerging adults at Time 1 (T1), with a 70% response rate 1 year later at Time 2 (T2). The results indicated that, after controlling for psychological distress at T1, social skills at T1 had an indirect effect on lower psychological distress at T2, through higher social support. Thus, people with poor social skills may be vulnerable to the development of psychological distress because they have less access the protective effects of social support.
Keywords:Social Skills  Psychological Distress  Social Support
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