Psychopathological Processes Involved in Social Comparison, Depression, and Envy on Facebook

被引:37
|
作者
Pera, Aurel [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Craiova, Dept Teacher Training, Craiova, Romania
来源
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY | 2018年 / 9卷
关键词
Facebook envy; depressed mood; social comparison; psychological well-being; positive self-presentation; PERCEPTIONS; ADOLESCENTS; STRESSFUL; BEHAVIORS; STUDENTS; SUPPORT;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00022
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Is Facebook utilization beneficial or detrimental for psychological well-being? I draw on outstanding research (e.g., Chou and Edge, 2012; Lin and Utz, 2015; Appel et al., 2016; Ehrenreich and Underwood, 2016; Vogel and Rose, 2016; Hu et al., 2017) to substantiate that examining other individuals' positively presented material on Facebook may have detrimental consequences. Increasing comparisons on Facebook may generate feelings of envy, the latter being a significant process determining the effect of growing social comparison on psychological well-being. To date, there is an increasing body of literature investigating the psychological consequences of Facebook usage, the function of relationship closeness in producing the feelings of contentment and envy, the impacts of exposure to positive content on Facebook, the link between envy and depression on Facebook, and the function of tie strength in expecting the emotional results of browsing Facebook. I am specifically interested in how previous research explored the consequences of Facebook use on psychological outcomes, the moderating function of envy in the link between Facebook use and reduced affective wellbeing, the psychological results of non-interactive Facebook conduct, and the role of relationship closeness in anticipating user's contentment and envy after inspecting a post. A synthesis of the extant literature suggests that inspecting other individuals' positive news on Facebook brings about contentment through emotional contagion, whereas negative news causes discomfort as a consequence of mood contagion, the transmissible effect being more powerful when the news is associated with a strong tie. The outcomes of this research back the argument that self-confidence and dispositional envy are instrumental in producing Facebook envy. These findings highlight that the emotional results of browsing Facebook are considerably affected by the substance of the comment, the personal attributes of the Facebook user, and link between the reader and the poster. As limitations in the current review, more hypotheses need to be tested and future directions for subsequent multilevel research on the behavioral and cognitive outcomes of Facebook should illuminate why when individuals achieve belongingness demands on Facebook, they feel in a superior way about themselves and their reputation in social circles.
引用
收藏
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] When positive reviews on social networking sites backfire: The role of social comparison and malicious envy
    Feng, Wenting
    Yang, Morgan X.
    Yu, Irina Y.
    Tu, Rungting
    JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY MARKETING & MANAGEMENT, 2021, 30 (01) : 120 - 138
  • [32] The Impact of Social Media on Social Comparison and Envy in Teenagers: The Moderating Role of the Parent Comparing Children and In-group Competition among Friends
    Charoensukmongkol, Peerayuth
    JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES, 2018, 27 (01) : 69 - 79
  • [33] Social comparison processes in organizations
    Greenberg, Jerald
    Ashton-James, Claire E.
    Ashkanasy, Neal M.
    ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND HUMAN DECISION PROCESSES, 2007, 102 (01) : 22 - 41
  • [34] Negative Social Comparison on Facebook and Depressive Symptoms: Rumination as a Mechanism
    Feinstein, Brian A.
    Hershenberg, Rachel
    Bhatia, Vickie
    Latack, Jessica A.
    Meuwly, Nathalie
    Davila, Joanne
    PSYCHOLOGY OF POPULAR MEDIA CULTURE, 2013, 2 (03): : 161 - 170
  • [35] Changes in the consequences of consumer envy due to ease of coping and social comparison targets
    Folkes V.S.
    AMS Review, 2011, 1 (3-4) : 135 - 136
  • [36] The spillover effect of incidental social comparison on materialistic pursuits: The mediating role of envy
    Zheng, Xiaoying
    Baskin, Ernest
    Peng, Siqing
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MARKETING, 2018, 52 (5-6) : 1107 - 1127
  • [37] Social comparison as a double-edged sword on social media: The role of envy type and online social identity
    Latif, Kashmala
    Weng, Qingxiong
    Pitafi, Abdul Hameed
    Ali, Ahmed
    Siddiqui, Asif Waheed
    Malik, Muhammad Yousaf
    Latif, Zara
    TELEMATICS AND INFORMATICS, 2021, 56 (56)
  • [38] FEELING BAD ON FACEBOOK: DEPRESSION DISCLOSURES BY COLLEGE STUDENTS ON A SOCIAL NETWORKING SITE
    Moreno, Megan A.
    Jelenchick, Lauren A.
    Egan, Katie G.
    Cox, Elizabeth
    Young, Henry
    Gannon, Kerry E.
    Becker, Tara
    DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY, 2011, 28 (06) : 447 - 455
  • [39] Positive Side of Social Comparison on Social Network Sites: How Envy Can Drive Inspiration on Instagram
    Meier, Adrian
    Schaefer, Svenja
    CYBERPSYCHOLOGY BEHAVIOR AND SOCIAL NETWORKING, 2018, 21 (07) : 411 - 417
  • [40] How do social media tourist images influence destination attitudes? Effects of social comparison and envy
    Xu, Jia
    Wang, Yi
    Jiang, Yangyang
    JOURNAL OF TRAVEL & TOURISM MARKETING, 2023, 40 (04) : 310 - 325