Deters Fenne Große, Mehl Matthias R
Soc Psychol Personal Sci. 2013 Sep 1;4(5). doi: 10.1177/1948550612469233.
Online social networking is a pervasive but empirically understudied phenomenon. Strong public opinions on its consequences exist but are backed up by little empirical evidence and almost no causally-conclusive, experimental research. The current study tested the psychological effects of posting status updates on Facebook using an experimental design. For one week, participants in the experimental condition were asked to post more than they usually do, whereas participants in the control condition received no instructions. Participants added a lab "Research Profile" as a Facebook friend allowing for the objective documentation of protocol compliance, participants' status updates, and friends' responses. Results revealed (1) that the experimentally-induced increase in status updating activity reduced loneliness, (2) that the decrease in loneliness was due to participants feeling more connected to their friends on a daily basis and (3) that the effect of posting on loneliness was independent of direct social feedback (i.e. responses) by friends.
在线社交网络是一种普遍存在但实证研究较少的现象。公众对其后果存在强烈观点,但几乎没有实证证据支持,也几乎没有因果关系确凿的实验研究。本研究采用实验设计测试了在脸书上发布状态更新的心理影响。在为期一周的时间里,要求实验组的参与者比平时发布更多内容,而对照组的参与者则没有收到任何指示。参与者添加了一个实验室“研究档案”作为脸书好友,以便客观记录协议遵守情况、参与者的状态更新以及朋友的回应。结果显示:(1)实验诱导的状态更新活动增加减轻了孤独感;(2)孤独感的降低是因为参与者每天感觉与朋友的联系更紧密;(3)发布内容对孤独感的影响独立于朋友的直接社交反馈(即回应)。