2023
DOI: 10.1177/13623613231177776
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The effect of autistic traits on prosocial behavior: The chain mediating role of received social support and perceived social support

Abstract: There is growing evidence that the defining characteristics of autism spectrum disorder are distributed across the general population; therefore, understanding the correlates of prosocial behavior in individuals with high levels of autistic traits could shed light on autism spectrum disorder and prosocial behavior. In this study, the mechanism underlying the influence of individuals’ autistic traits on their prosocial behavior was explored by conducting a questionnaire survey of 414 Chinese college students. T… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Objective social support pertains to the actual respect, understanding, and support that an individual receives from others ( Langford et al, 1997 ). In contrast, subjective social support refers to the level of satisfaction an individual experiences with the support available to them, as well as their perception of the extent to which they are supported externally ( Langford et al, 1997 ; Zhang et al, 2023 ). The latter emphasizes the significance of self-perceptions in social support, which more accurately reflects an individual’s internal psychological state and is thus a more effective predictor of prosocial behavior.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Objective social support pertains to the actual respect, understanding, and support that an individual receives from others ( Langford et al, 1997 ). In contrast, subjective social support refers to the level of satisfaction an individual experiences with the support available to them, as well as their perception of the extent to which they are supported externally ( Langford et al, 1997 ; Zhang et al, 2023 ). The latter emphasizes the significance of self-perceptions in social support, which more accurately reflects an individual’s internal psychological state and is thus a more effective predictor of prosocial behavior.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%