# Under Pressure, but Together: Stressor Reactivity and Daily Social Connection in Middle and Later Adulthood

**Authors:** Susan Charles, Eric Cerino, Jennifer Piazza, David Almeida, Jonathan Rush

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.637 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how daily feelings of social connection affect how people cope with stress in middle and later adulthood.

## Contribution

The study reveals that daily social connection reduces negative emotions in response to stressors.

## Key findings

- Greater daily social connection is linked to lower negative affect in response to stressors.
- The effect of stressors on negative affect is reduced when individuals feel more socially connected.
- Adjusting for factors like positive affect and parental warmth, social connection still buffers stress reactivity.

## Abstract

Social belonging has long been conceptualized and studied as a stable individual difference characteristic, shaped by temperament, personality, and childhood experiences. In this talk, we will discuss how feelings of social connection vary on a daily basis, and how these variations are related to stressor reactivity. Using eight days of daily diary data from the National Study of Daily Experiences (N = 2,022), we examine how daily social connection is related to negative affect experienced in response to a stressor in a national sample of midlife and later adulthood. Each day, participants reported whether they had experienced a daily stressor (e.g., an argument, a stressor at work, a stressor at home), and the extent to which they felt a sense of belonging across the past 24 hours. We used multilevel modelling to examine how levels of daily social belonging were related to changes in negative affect on days when people responded to stressors, after adjusting for average levels of positive affect, stressor exposure, and parental warmth. In a model examining the main effects, greater sense of belonging was related to lower levels of negative affect ( γ =-.022, p<.001), and stressor exposure was related to higher negative affect (γ =.127, p<.001). However, the addition of the within-person interaction indicated that negative affect was lower on stressor days when people felt a higher sense of belonging (γ = -0.065, p<.001). Results suggest that daily connection is important for well-being and how we respond to stressors in daily life.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12759401