Research on the network structure and gender/age differences of psychological safety among urban residents: network analysis based on a large sample

Abstract Background Psychological safety as the key to mental health, not only affects individual happiness and quality of life but also relates to social stability and harmony. However, psychological safety is complex and multidimensional, with unclear internal structures and influencing factors an...

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Main Authors: Tao Yang, Huicong Cai, Juan Song, Na Li, Haiyan Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-01-01
Series:BMC Psychology
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02401-z
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author Tao Yang
Huicong Cai
Juan Song
Na Li
Haiyan Liu
author_facet Tao Yang
Huicong Cai
Juan Song
Na Li
Haiyan Liu
author_sort Tao Yang
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Psychological safety as the key to mental health, not only affects individual happiness and quality of life but also relates to social stability and harmony. However, psychological safety is complex and multidimensional, with unclear internal structures and influencing factors and insufficient research on gender and age differences. Urban residents are living in an environment characterized by fast-paced, high-pressure, multicultural integration, and complex social relationships. Therefore, in-depth exploration of its core dimensions and network structure is crucial for formulating effective mental health strategies and enhancing residents’ sense of psychological safety. Methods A survey was conducted on 9,282 urban residents using the Psychological Safety Scale. Using R version 4.3.2 for network estimation, centrality estimation, accuracy and stability estimation, and network comparison. Results The results found that the strength centrality index of the general sense of safety dimension is always the highest in the total network and networks of different genders and ages. The network comparison results show that there are significant gender and age differences in the dimensions/item networks of psychological safety. There are connections between trust and relaxation, excitement, and calmness in the dimension network of male samples, while there are no such connections in the dimension network of female samples. The general sense of safety and relaxation connection strength on the male dimension network is significantly stronger than that on the female dimension. In the dimension network of the youth sample, the strength of the connection between calmness and relaxation, trust and relaxation were significantly stronger than those of the middle-age sample, while the strength of the connection between relaxation and excitement was significantly weaker than that of the middle-age sample. Conclusion Researchers should fully consider gender and age factors and adopt more personalized and differentiated strategies for promoting individual psychological safety.
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spelling doaj-art-3ea4bcdbcd17445f99a1fb8c5302ef432025-02-02T12:48:16ZengBMCBMC Psychology2050-72832025-01-0113111710.1186/s40359-025-02401-zResearch on the network structure and gender/age differences of psychological safety among urban residents: network analysis based on a large sampleTao Yang0Huicong Cai1Juan Song2Na Li3Haiyan Liu4School of Economics and Management, China University of Geosciences (Beijing)School of Economics and Management, China University of Geosciences (Beijing)School of Economics and Management, China University of Geosciences (Beijing)School of Economics and Management, China University of Geosciences (Beijing)School of Economics and Management, China University of Geosciences (Beijing)Abstract Background Psychological safety as the key to mental health, not only affects individual happiness and quality of life but also relates to social stability and harmony. However, psychological safety is complex and multidimensional, with unclear internal structures and influencing factors and insufficient research on gender and age differences. Urban residents are living in an environment characterized by fast-paced, high-pressure, multicultural integration, and complex social relationships. Therefore, in-depth exploration of its core dimensions and network structure is crucial for formulating effective mental health strategies and enhancing residents’ sense of psychological safety. Methods A survey was conducted on 9,282 urban residents using the Psychological Safety Scale. Using R version 4.3.2 for network estimation, centrality estimation, accuracy and stability estimation, and network comparison. Results The results found that the strength centrality index of the general sense of safety dimension is always the highest in the total network and networks of different genders and ages. The network comparison results show that there are significant gender and age differences in the dimensions/item networks of psychological safety. There are connections between trust and relaxation, excitement, and calmness in the dimension network of male samples, while there are no such connections in the dimension network of female samples. The general sense of safety and relaxation connection strength on the male dimension network is significantly stronger than that on the female dimension. In the dimension network of the youth sample, the strength of the connection between calmness and relaxation, trust and relaxation were significantly stronger than those of the middle-age sample, while the strength of the connection between relaxation and excitement was significantly weaker than that of the middle-age sample. Conclusion Researchers should fully consider gender and age factors and adopt more personalized and differentiated strategies for promoting individual psychological safety.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02401-zPsychological safetyNetwork analysisNetwork comparisonGender differencesAge differenceUrban residents
spellingShingle Tao Yang
Huicong Cai
Juan Song
Na Li
Haiyan Liu
Research on the network structure and gender/age differences of psychological safety among urban residents: network analysis based on a large sample
BMC Psychology
Psychological safety
Network analysis
Network comparison
Gender differences
Age difference
Urban residents
title Research on the network structure and gender/age differences of psychological safety among urban residents: network analysis based on a large sample
title_full Research on the network structure and gender/age differences of psychological safety among urban residents: network analysis based on a large sample
title_fullStr Research on the network structure and gender/age differences of psychological safety among urban residents: network analysis based on a large sample
title_full_unstemmed Research on the network structure and gender/age differences of psychological safety among urban residents: network analysis based on a large sample
title_short Research on the network structure and gender/age differences of psychological safety among urban residents: network analysis based on a large sample
title_sort research on the network structure and gender age differences of psychological safety among urban residents network analysis based on a large sample
topic Psychological safety
Network analysis
Network comparison
Gender differences
Age difference
Urban residents
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-025-02401-z
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