Study to tackle ‘transient loneliness’
18 November 2015
New research has been launched to tackle the issues of ‘transient loneliness’ which affects increasing numbers of people from migrants and carers to students and lone workers and contributes to more than one in 10 people in the UK describing themselves as 'lonely'.
Transient loneliness typically affects people who are temporarily separated from family and friends and undergo important life transitions or disruptions such as: migrant workers moving to the UK for employment, students who leave home to study, lone workers, and those who find themselves in the position of needing to provide full-time care to a family member.
Such groups are thought to be more vulnerable to periods of loneliness and may be less likely to take steps to deal with it. The study Loneliness in the Digital Age: Building Strategies for Empathy and Trust explores transient loneliness and how technical interventions might help relieve feelings of isolation.
Lead researcher Professor Mike Wilson from Loughborough University said: “It is ironic that in an age where we are more digitally connected than ever to the world around us, increasing numbers of people are experiencing periods of loneliness.
“Our aim is to better understand what it means to be transiently lonely, to map how and when these feelings occur, and to work with those affected to explore how this loneliness could be alleviated through creative interventions and technology.
“These people are not ‘lonely people’ in the sense of being chronically lonely, but they are experiencing senses of isolation which could be detrimental to their health and wellbeing.”
The project is being funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), along with the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), and The Defence Science and Technology Laboratory(Dstl), and brings together researchers from Loughborough University and the Universities of Bath, Newcastle, Exeter and Northumbria.
Researchers are working with a number of groups and organisations to identify those experiencing or at risk of transient loneliness.
Transient loneliness typically affects people who are temporarily separated from family and friends and undergo important life transitions or disruptions such as: migrant workers moving to the UK for employment, students who leave home to study, lone workers, and those who find themselves in the position of needing to provide full-time care to a family member.
Such groups are thought to be more vulnerable to periods of loneliness and may be less likely to take steps to deal with it. The study Loneliness in the Digital Age: Building Strategies for Empathy and Trust explores transient loneliness and how technical interventions might help relieve feelings of isolation.
Lead researcher Professor Mike Wilson from Loughborough University said: “It is ironic that in an age where we are more digitally connected than ever to the world around us, increasing numbers of people are experiencing periods of loneliness.
“Our aim is to better understand what it means to be transiently lonely, to map how and when these feelings occur, and to work with those affected to explore how this loneliness could be alleviated through creative interventions and technology.
“These people are not ‘lonely people’ in the sense of being chronically lonely, but they are experiencing senses of isolation which could be detrimental to their health and wellbeing.”
The project is being funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), along with the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), and The Defence Science and Technology Laboratory(Dstl), and brings together researchers from Loughborough University and the Universities of Bath, Newcastle, Exeter and Northumbria.
Researchers are working with a number of groups and organisations to identify those experiencing or at risk of transient loneliness.
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