Daily Manifestations of Maladaptive personality traits and Loneliness across Social Contexts in Youth
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Adolescence is characterized by heightened sensitivity to social belonging, making loneliness prevalent and consequential for youth. Maladaptive personality traits may further exacerbate loneliness. In this preregistered 14-day Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) study, we examined loneliness across social contexts and timescales (momentarily, daily) in relation to maladaptive personality traits among N = 294 adolescents aged 12-21 years (Mage = 17.5, SD = 2.64; 58.5% female; 86.73% born in Germany). Loneliness (βmomentary = 0.51; βdaily = 0.67) was higher when participants were alone, yet only the presence of close others (e.g., friends)—not weaker ties (e.g., classmates)—reduced loneliness (β = –0.39 to –0.62). Interestingly, youth who were alone more frequently did not report higher overall loneliness. Maladaptive personality traits were associated with higher (βmomentary = 0.32; βend-of-day = 0.40) and more variable (βmomentary = 0.31; βend-of-day = 0.34) loneliness but amplified the effect of being alone on loneliness only on the between-person level (β = –1.13). Detachment and Negative Affect showed unique patterns. Exploratory analyses indicated that social satisfaction partially mediated the association (β = 0.50). These findings underscore the importance of both structural and qualitative aspects of social environments, as well as personality-related vulnerabilities, to better understand loneliness-dynamics in youth.