“…Further research attention should be paid to neighborhood social capital's multidimensionality. Using wave 2 of the National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (NSHAP) survey, the same data set employed in the present study, York Cornwell and Cagney (2014) disaggregate the overall neighborhood social context (here referred to as "overall neighborhood social capital") into scales of social cohesion (a community's close-knittedness and trustingness, as well as congruence in values), social ties (how often community residents act in each other's interests), and danger (a community's extent of danger and crime; as explained in Section 2, this scale is here reverse coded to construct a measure of neighborhood safety), all of which impact residents' health (Cicognani et al, 2020; Gattino et al, 2013;Henderson et al, 2016;Kim & Ross, 2009;Weisburd et al, 2018). As well as some disagreement in the scholarly literature concerning whether troubled neighborhood conditions strengthen or weaken community social fabric, there is a dearth of research investigating how residents' health and well-being (e.g., Gariepy et al, 2014;Glymour et al, 2010;Wight et al, 2013), and different dimensions of neighborhood social capital change as neighborhood socioeconomic conditions change.…”