Friendships Post-COVID: Resume, Repair, or Replace?

General Health

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Marvin Roca Jr., public relations associate, Los Angeles.

Arianna Varas, executive assistant, New York City.

Amy, journalist, Southern California.

Robin Ian MacDonald Dunbar, PhD, professor of evolutionary psychology, University of Oxford, U.K.

Rebecca Adams, PhD, friendship researcher, professor, University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

Julianne Holt-Lunstad, PhD, professor of psychology and neuroscience, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT.

Jessica D. Ayers, PhD candidate, Arizona State University, Tempe.

Proceedings of the Royal Society A: “Structure and function in human and primate social networks: implications for diffusion, network stability and health.”

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin: “Social Interactions and Well-Being: The Surprising Power of Weak Ties.”

PsyArXiv: “The changing landscape of friendship in the pandemic: Males, younger people, and less educated people experience more negative effects of the pandemic on their friendships.” 

Perspectives on Psychological Science: “Social Ambivalence and Disease (SAD): A Theoretical Model Aimed at Understanding the Health Implications of Ambivalent Relationships.”

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