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About: This site was created as a virtual repository for all of the various psychology and therapy-related things (quotes, articles, videos, music, pictures) I come across online in my work as a psychotherapist.


Disclaimer: Posting something to this site does not mean that I necessarily agree with or endorse the opinions being expressed therein. The articles I link to here are meant only to inform and inspire thought and discussion, but they are absolutely not meant to be taken as my personal or professional opinion on any particular issue.


Imaginary Friends: how TV programs can fend off loneliness (Scientific American)

New psychological research suggests that loneliness can be alleviated by simply turning on your favorite TV show. In the same way that a snack can satiate hunger in lieu of a meal, it seems that watching favorite TV shows can provide the experience of belonging without a true interpersonal interaction.

For decades, psychologists have been interested in understanding how individuals achieve and maintain social relationships in order to ward off social isolation and loneliness. The vast majority of this research has focused on relationships between real individuals interacting face-to-face. Recent research has widened this focus from real relationships to faux, “parasocial” relationships. Parasocial relationships are the kind of one sided pseudo-relationships we develop over time with people or characters we might see on TV or in the movies. So, just as a friendship evolves through spending time together and sharing personal thoughts and opinions, parasocial relationships evolve by watching characters on our favorite TV shows, and becoming involved with their personal lives, idiosyncrasies, and experiences as if they were those of a friend.

In a recent article published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Jaye Derrick and Shira Gabriel of the University of Buffalo and Kurt Hugenberg of Miami University test what they call the “Social Surrogacy Hypothesis.”

The authors theorized that loneliness motivates individuals to seek out relationships, even if those relationships are not real. In a series of experiments, the authors demonstrated that participants were more likely to report watching a favorite TV show when they were feeling lonely and reported being less likely to feel lonely while watching.

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  3. leucocrystal reblogged this from sarking and added:
    I feel that. Watching Mulder and Scully is akin to curling up with a cozy blanket for me. (Similar, yet not quite as...
  4. sarking reblogged this from psychotherapy and added:
    Watching my friends Keef
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  10. the-metres-gained reblogged this from somethingbeautifull and added:
    … That’s not talking about me. Of course it isn’t.
  11. mirrorbluenight reblogged this from somethingbeautifull and added:
    this is me with F.r.i.e.n.d.s lol
  12. somethingbeautifull reblogged this from psychotherapy and added:
    lol but kinda sad
  13. pleaseshowmehowtolive reblogged this from psychotherapy
  14. under-leaves reblogged this from psychotherapy and added:
    I’ve definitely experienced
  15. notemily reblogged this from psychotherapy and added:
    I think this might...why I vastly prefer...change over...
  16. deadscreen reblogged this from psychotherapy
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