Krämer Nicole C, Feurstein Markus, Kluck Jan P, Meier Yannic, Rother Marius, Winter Stephan
Department of Social Psychology: Media and Communication, University of Duisburg-Essen Duisburg, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2017 Feb 16;8:188. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00188. eCollection 2017.
Users of social networking sites such as Facebook frequently post self-portraits on their profiles. While research has begun to analyze the motivations for posting such pictures, less is known about how selfies are evaluated by recipients. Although producers of selfies typically aim to create a positive impression, selfies may also be regarded as narcissistic and therefore fail to achieve the intended goal. The aim of this study is to examine the potentially ambivalent reception of selfies compared to photos taken by others based on the Brunswik lens model Brunswik (1956). In a between-subjects online experiment ( = 297), Facebook profile mockups were shown which differed with regard to picture type (selfie vs. photo taken by others), gender of the profile owner (female vs. male), and number of individuals within a picture (single person vs. group). Results revealed that selfies were indeed evaluated more negatively than photos taken by others. Persons in selfies were rated as less trustworthy, less socially attractive, less open to new experiences, more narcissistic and more extroverted than the same persons in photos taken by others. In addition, gender differences were observed in the perception of pictures. Male profile owners were rated as more narcissistic and less trustworthy than female profile owners, but there was no significant interaction effect of type of picture and gender. Moreover, a mediation analysis of presumed motives for posting selfies revealed that negative evaluations of selfie posting individuals were mainly driven by the perceived motivation of impression management. Findings suggest that selfies are likely to be evaluated less positively than producers of selfies might suppose.
Facebook等社交网站的用户经常在个人资料中发布自拍照。虽然已有研究开始分析发布此类照片的动机,但对于接收者如何评价自拍照却知之甚少。尽管自拍照的拍摄者通常旨在留下正面印象,但自拍照也可能被视为自恋,从而无法达到预期目的。本研究的目的是基于布伦斯维克透镜模型(布伦斯维克,1956年),探讨与他人拍摄的照片相比,自拍照可能产生的矛盾性评价。在一项被试间在线实验(N = 297)中,展示了Facebook个人资料的模拟页面,这些页面在照片类型(自拍与他人拍摄的照片)、资料所有者的性别(女性与男性)以及照片中的人物数量(单人与多人)方面存在差异。结果显示,自拍照确实比他人拍摄的照片得到的评价更负面。与他人拍摄的照片中的人物相比,自拍照中的人物被认为更不值得信赖、社交吸引力更低、对新体验的开放性更低、更自恋且更外向。此外,在对照片的认知上还观察到了性别差异。男性资料所有者比女性资料所有者被认为更自恋且更不值得信赖,但照片类型和性别之间没有显著的交互作用。此外,对发布自拍照的假定动机进行的中介分析表明,对发布自拍照的人的负面评价主要是由印象管理的感知动机驱动的。研究结果表明,自拍照可能不会像拍摄者所设想的那样得到积极评价。