Death Anxiety and Social Exclusion Open access Peer reviewed

From social exclusion to interpersonal alienation among Chinese college students: the sequential mediating roles of social avoidance and self-disclosure inhibition

Y Liu, Pan Chen, Peng Lei, Wei Tang

Frontiers in Psychology | Jun 15, 2026

Abstract

Abstract

Background Social exclusion—being ignored, rejected, or excluded in social interactions—is a prevalent interpersonal stressor among college students, yet the specific mechanisms linking exclusion to long-term interpersonal difficulties remain poorly understood. Objective This study tested a serial mediation model examining whether social avoidance and self-disclosure inhibition sequentially mediate the association between social exclusion and interpersonal alienation among Chinese college students. Methods A total of 1,166 Chinese college students (64.67% female; M = 20.12, SD = 1.29) completed measures of social exclusion, social avoidance, self-disclosure, and interpersonal alienation. Serial mediation analysis using PROCESS Model 6 with bias-corrected bootstrap confidence intervals (5,000 resamples) was conducted. Results The model explained 45.4% of the variance in interpersonal alienation. Social exclusion was significantly associated with interpersonal alienation (β = 0.571, p < 0.001). Three significant indirect pathways were identified: a behavioral pathway through social avoidance, a cognitive pathway through self-disclosure inhibition, and a serial pathway from social avoidance to self-disclosure inhibition. The behavioral and cognitive pathways contributed approximately equally, while the serial pathway contributed a smaller but significant portion. Results remained robust after controlling for gender and academic level. Conclusions The findings support a sequential pattern in which social exclusion is associated with behavioral avoidance, which is linked to reduced self-disclosure and greater interpersonal alienation. This pattern suggests that interventions targeting both behavioral avoidance and self-disclosure inhibition may help address exclusion-related interpersonal difficulties among college students.

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Authors

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Y Liu

first | Xihua University

Pan Chen

middle | Sichuan Tourism University

Peng Lei

middle | Sichuan Tourism University

Wei Tang

last | Southwestern University of Finance and Economics

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Citation

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@article{Liu2026From,
  title = {From social exclusion to interpersonal alienation among Chinese college students: the sequential mediating roles of social avoidance and self-disclosure inhibition},
  author = {Y Liu and Pan Chen and Peng Lei and Wei Tang},
  journal = {Frontiers in Psychology},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1831369},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1831369}
}

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