Social Restrictions in the COVID-19 Pandemic As a Traumatic Experience: Psycholinguistic Markers

The COVID-19 pandemic has affected all aspects of life including psychological well-being. Social restrictions, changes in habits, and permanent stay at home might have a negative impact on the psychological state of people. The purpose of our study is to conduct a psycholinguistic analysis of pande...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Natalia Kostruba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University 2021-06-01
Series:East European Journal of Psycholinguistics
Subjects:
men
Online Access:https://eejpl.vnu.edu.ua/index.php/eejpl/article/view/468/268
id doaj-98cbd5ba11b34c9aa3a593e82f578ba7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-98cbd5ba11b34c9aa3a593e82f578ba72021-07-23T07:04:56ZengLesya Ukrainka Volyn National UniversityEast European Journal of Psycholinguistics2312-32652313-21162021-06-01812840https://doi.org/10.29038/eejpl.2021.8.1.kosSocial Restrictions in the COVID-19 Pandemic As a Traumatic Experience: Psycholinguistic MarkersNatalia Kostruba0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3852-4729Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University, UkraineThe COVID-19 pandemic has affected all aspects of life including psychological well-being. Social restrictions, changes in habits, and permanent stay at home might have a negative impact on the psychological state of people. The purpose of our study is to conduct a psycholinguistic analysis of pandemic narratives to identify markers of traumatic experience and identify possible gender differences. The sample consisted of 167 respondents (72% females). The mean age of participants was 21.09 years (SD = 4.52). The study was conducted in Ukraine online in 2020, during the second wave of lockdown. The audience was asked to write a narrative on “How my life changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Personal experience”. As a result, we have found psycholinguistic markers that confirm the traumatic experience. Among them were the markers of time, depersonalization, and affective processes. A clear distinction of experience before and after the pandemic was detected in the narratives. This is characteristic of traumatic experience. In samples, such a distinction is made using the words “was” and “became”. The psychological marker of affective processes indicates immersion in a traumatic event. This discomposure is reflected in the manifestation of negative emotions through the words “bad”, “problems”, “critical”, and “difficult”. The main semantic markers in pandemic narratives are time and life. The life marker was meaningfully represented by stories about social limitations and physical health. Distinctions in pandemic descriptions of men and women have been revealed as psycholinguistic and semantic markers are different. Narratives of women are larger, they use more words (pronouns, adverbs and conjunctions, interrogatives and quantifiers) than men. Regarding content, men are more likely to talk about affective processes, while women − about social and biological ones. Our study is a maiden attempt to reflect on the pandemic as a traumatic event within the collective experience. https://eejpl.vnu.edu.ua/index.php/eejpl/article/view/468/268covid-19 pandemic narrativemental healthtraumatic experiencepsycholinguistic markerwomenmen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natalia Kostruba
spellingShingle Natalia Kostruba
Social Restrictions in the COVID-19 Pandemic As a Traumatic Experience: Psycholinguistic Markers
East European Journal of Psycholinguistics
covid-19 pandemic narrative
mental health
traumatic experience
psycholinguistic marker
women
men
author_facet Natalia Kostruba
author_sort Natalia Kostruba
title Social Restrictions in the COVID-19 Pandemic As a Traumatic Experience: Psycholinguistic Markers
title_short Social Restrictions in the COVID-19 Pandemic As a Traumatic Experience: Psycholinguistic Markers
title_full Social Restrictions in the COVID-19 Pandemic As a Traumatic Experience: Psycholinguistic Markers
title_fullStr Social Restrictions in the COVID-19 Pandemic As a Traumatic Experience: Psycholinguistic Markers
title_full_unstemmed Social Restrictions in the COVID-19 Pandemic As a Traumatic Experience: Psycholinguistic Markers
title_sort social restrictions in the covid-19 pandemic as a traumatic experience: psycholinguistic markers
publisher Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University
series East European Journal of Psycholinguistics
issn 2312-3265
2313-2116
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The COVID-19 pandemic has affected all aspects of life including psychological well-being. Social restrictions, changes in habits, and permanent stay at home might have a negative impact on the psychological state of people. The purpose of our study is to conduct a psycholinguistic analysis of pandemic narratives to identify markers of traumatic experience and identify possible gender differences. The sample consisted of 167 respondents (72% females). The mean age of participants was 21.09 years (SD = 4.52). The study was conducted in Ukraine online in 2020, during the second wave of lockdown. The audience was asked to write a narrative on “How my life changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Personal experience”. As a result, we have found psycholinguistic markers that confirm the traumatic experience. Among them were the markers of time, depersonalization, and affective processes. A clear distinction of experience before and after the pandemic was detected in the narratives. This is characteristic of traumatic experience. In samples, such a distinction is made using the words “was” and “became”. The psychological marker of affective processes indicates immersion in a traumatic event. This discomposure is reflected in the manifestation of negative emotions through the words “bad”, “problems”, “critical”, and “difficult”. The main semantic markers in pandemic narratives are time and life. The life marker was meaningfully represented by stories about social limitations and physical health. Distinctions in pandemic descriptions of men and women have been revealed as psycholinguistic and semantic markers are different. Narratives of women are larger, they use more words (pronouns, adverbs and conjunctions, interrogatives and quantifiers) than men. Regarding content, men are more likely to talk about affective processes, while women − about social and biological ones. Our study is a maiden attempt to reflect on the pandemic as a traumatic event within the collective experience.
topic covid-19 pandemic narrative
mental health
traumatic experience
psycholinguistic marker
women
men
url https://eejpl.vnu.edu.ua/index.php/eejpl/article/view/468/268
work_keys_str_mv AT nataliakostruba socialrestrictionsinthecovid19pandemicasatraumaticexperiencepsycholinguisticmarkers
_version_ 1721290402176172032