翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Lonely Woman
・ Lonely Woman (album)
・ Lonely Woman (composition)
・ Lonely Women
・ Lonely Women Make Good Lovers
・ Lone Wolves (adventure)
・ Lone worker
・ Lone worker monitoring
・ Lone, Kentucky
・ Lonea Coal Mine
・ Lonea River
・ Lonedell, Missouri
・ Lonehill
・ Lonelady
・ Loneliest in the Morning
Loneliness
・ Loneliness (disambiguation)
・ Loneliness (short story)
・ Loneliness (song)
・ Loneliness in America
・ Loneliness Is Bliss
・ Loneliness Knows My Name
・ Lonell de Beer
・ Lonely
・ Lonely (2NE1 song)
・ Lonely (Akon song)
・ Lonely (Mao Abe song)
・ Lonely (Medina song)
・ Lonely (Merril Bainbridge song)
・ Lonely (Nana song)


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Loneliness : ウィキペディア英語版
Loneliness

Loneliness is a complex and usually unpleasant emotional response to isolation or lack of companionship. Loneliness typically includes anxious feelings about a lack of connectedness or communality with other beings, both in the present and extending into the future. As such, loneliness can be felt even when surrounded by other people. The causes of loneliness are varied and include social, mental or emotional factors.
Research has shown that loneliness is widely prevalent throughout society among people in marriages, relationships, families, veterans and successful careers. It has been a long explored theme in the literature of human beings since classical antiquity. Loneliness has also been described as social pain — a psychological mechanism meant to alert an individual of isolation and motivate him/her to seek social connections.〔Cacioppo, John; Patrick, William, ''Loneliness: Human Nature and the Need for Social Connection'', New York : W.W. Norton & Co., 2008. ISBN 978-0-393-06170-3. (Science of Loneliness.com )〕
==Common causes==
People can experience loneliness for many reasons and many life events may cause it, like the lack of friendship relations during childhood and adolescence, or the physical absence of meaningful people around a person. At the same time, loneliness may be a symptom of another social or psychological problem, such as chronic depression.
Many people experience loneliness for the first time when they are left alone as infants. It is also a very common, though normally temporary, consequence of a breakup, divorce, or loss of any important long-term relationship. In these cases, it may stem both from the loss of a specific person and from the withdrawal from social circles caused by the event or the associated sadness.
The loss of a significant person in one's life will typically initiate a grief response; in this situation, one might feel lonely, even while in the company of others. Loneliness may also occur after the birth of a child (often expressed in postpartum depression), after marriage, or following any other socially disruptive event, such as moving from one's home town into an unfamiliar community leading to homesickness. Loneliness can occur within unstable marriages or other close relationships of a similar nature, in which feelings present may include anger or resentment, or in which the feeling of love cannot be given or received. Loneliness may represent a dysfunction of communication, and can also result from places with low population densities in which there are comparatively few people to interact with. Loneliness can also be seen as a social phenomenon, capable of spreading like a disease. When one person in a group begins to feel lonely, this feeling can spread to others, increasing everybody's risk for feelings of loneliness. People can feel lonely even when they're surrounded by other people.
A twin study found evidence that genetics account for approximately half of the measurable differences in loneliness among adults, which was similar to the heritability estimates found previously in children. These genes operate in a similar manner in males and females. The study found no common environmental contributions to adult loneliness.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Loneliness」の詳細全文を読む



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