Social supports, social networks, and schizophrenia.

This article considers the meaning of "social support" and its relationship to social networks, and discusses a structural approach to analysis of social connections in the study of schizophrenia. The concept of social supports is seen as methodologically more problematic and less strategic than the more structurally oriented concepts of social networks and social connections. It is argued that in terms of research strategy, if social connections are studied structurally as they change and develop over time, the impact of the specifically social processes can be better separated from that of the personal characteristics of the focal individual than seems possible with other approaches. Analysis of the properties of the networks around the focal individual, independently of that individual's own social behavior, can help to disentangle the interwoven complex of causes, characteristics, and consequences of schizophrenia.

[1]  Barton J. Hirsch,et al.  Psychological dimensions of social networks: A multimethod analysis , 1979 .

[2]  B. Wellman The Community Question: The Intimate Networks of East Yorkers , 1979, American Journal of Sociology.

[3]  L. Berkman,et al.  Social networks, host resistance, and mortality: a nine-year follow-up study of Alameda County residents. , 1979, American journal of epidemiology.

[4]  M. Hammer Predictability of social connections over time , 1979 .

[5]  L. Pearlin,et al.  The structure of coping. , 1978, Journal of health and social behavior.

[6]  M. Hallinan The process of friendship formation , 1978 .

[7]  M. Kochen,et al.  Contacts and influence , 1978 .

[8]  J. Sokolovsky,et al.  Schizophrenia and social networks: ex-patients in the inner city. , 1978, Schizophrenia bulletin.

[9]  M. Hammer,et al.  Social networks and schizophrenia. , 1978, Schizophrenia bulletin.

[10]  C. Fischer,et al.  Networks and Places , 1977 .

[11]  G. Brown,et al.  Psychiatric disorder in London and North Uist. , 1977, Social science & medicine.

[12]  C. Tolsdorf,et al.  Social networks, support, and coping: an exploratory study. , 1976, Family process.

[13]  E. Pattison,et al.  A psychosocial kinship model for family therapy. , 1975, The American journal of psychiatry.

[14]  M. Hammer,et al.  interconnectedness and the duration of connections in several small networks1 , 1975 .

[15]  Mark S. Granovetter The Strength of Weak Ties , 1973, American Journal of Sociology.

[16]  M. Hammer,et al.  Speech Predictability and Social Contact Patterns in an Informal Group , 1969 .

[17]  J. Zubin,et al.  Evolution, culture and psychopathology. , 1968, The Journal of general psychology.

[18]  M. Hammer,et al.  SOME FORMAL CHARACTERISTICS OF SCHIZOPHRENIC SPEECH AS A MEASURE OF SOCIAL DEVIANCE * , 1964, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[19]  M. Hammer Influence of Small Social Networks as Factors on Mental Hospital Admission , 1963 .

[20]  T. Caplow Rumors in War , 1947 .

[21]  William Foote Whyte,et al.  Street Corner Society , 1943 .