Abstract

Mutual help is common in human society, particularly during a disaster. The psychological processes underlying such social support are of interest in social and evolutionary psychology, as well as in the promotion of community resilience. However, research in terms of personality factors or support types is sporadic and has yet to address actual emergency situations. In this study, we analyzed survey data from survivors of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. The data included five types of social support occurring during the evacuation from a potential tsunami area: providing and receiving actual help and oral encouragement, as well as perceived support. The personality factor items included the Big Five dimensions and eight “power to live” factors, which were identified as advantageous for survival during this disaster. While none of the Big Five dimensions were associated with social support, six of the power to live factors were. Altruism, problem solving, etiquette, and self-transcendence contributed to the provision of actual help. Leadership and active well-being contributed to oral encouragement with the latter contributing also to perceived support. The findings were largely consistent with the literature in a non-emergency context. The relevance of the majority of these pro-survival personality factors to social support appeared to support the view that the propensity to cooperate in service of human survival in a disaster situation is primarily a social, rather than an individual, phenomenon, and encourages research on the mechanisms underlying how personality factors provide a benefit to both the individual and their community.

Highlights

  • In human society, people help each other survive harsh realities

  • Respondents were helped, 42% were encouraged by others, and 54% perceived themselves as recipients of social support

  • Among the eight pro-survival power to live personality factors, six factors were associated with some type of social support during the emergency evacuation from a tsunami area

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Summary

Introduction

People help each other survive harsh realities. Mutual help is common during emergencies in disaster situations [1, 2] and, rather than being limited to members of an established community, can occur among strangers. During these periods, altruistic behavior predominates over egoistic behavior, bringing a sense of happiness to damaged communities in a phenomenon known as a post-disaster utopia [3]. Personality and social support in disaster (https://www.jsps.go.jp/english/index.html). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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