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Self on the Net: Actual Damn Research

An anonymous source has forwarded to me a pay-for-download article: “Can You See the Real Me? Activation and Expressoin of the ‘True Self’ on the Internet” in Journal of Social Issues (vol. 58, no. 1, pp. 33-48), by John A. Bargh, Katelyn Y.A. McKenna and Grainne M. Fitzimmons of NYU. It gives evidence that there’s some reality to the self we present on the Net.

The researchers begin with Carl Rogers’ belief that people often feel that elements of who they are don’t surface in face-to-face interactions. Their hypothesis is that the anonymity of Internet encounters enables those elements to surface. They then did a set of experiments that confirmed this. Further, “features of Internet interaction facilitate the projection onto the partner of idealized qualities.” While this sounds to the naive (= me) like a Bad Thing, in fact:

…these are precisely those features that previous research has determined to be critical for the formation of close, intimate relations: Internet communication enables self-disclosure because of its relatively anonymous nature … and it fosters idealization of the other in the absence of information to the contrary…

Note that this study looks at anonymous interactions, not at long-term relationships built up through email and weblogs.

Normally, I wouldn’t pay much mind to this type of research, but since it confirms my prejudices, I’m suddenly all in favor of it. (You can find the abstract here.)

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