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Cited 112 time in webofscience Cited 125 time in scopus
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Social comparison on Facebook: Motivation, affective consequences, self-esteem, and Facebook fatigue

Authors
Cramer, Emily M.Song, HayeonDrent, Adam M.
Issue Date
Nov-2016
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Keywords
Social comparison; Facebook; Self-esteem; Hyperpersonal model; Social media
Citation
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, v.64, pp.739 - 746
Journal Title
COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR
Volume
64
Start Page
739
End Page
746
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/7717
DOI
10.1016/j.chb.2016.07.049
ISSN
0747-5632
Abstract
A growing body of research examines social comparison on Facebook, a social media environment where users can present optimized versions of themselves. To grasp the complexity of social comparison on Facebook, the researchers followed Helgeson and Mickelson's (1995) functional approach, focusing on motives (i.e., self-enhancement, self-improvement, self-evaluation, and self-destruction) rather than fixed targets (i.e., downward, upward, and unilateral comparison) of social comparison. Social comparison motivations were explored in relation to self-esteem and affective consequences of comparison. A college-student sample (N = 267) reported engaging in social comparison frequently on Facebook and low-self-esteem (LSE) individuals were more likely than those with higher self-esteem (HSE) to compare themselves to others on Facebook for self-evaluation, self-enhancement, self-improvement, and self-destruction motives. Moreover, LSEs perceived increased levels of social comparison on Facebook, although the relationship between self-esteem and actual social comparison behavior proved nonsignificant. Significant moderating effects of self-esteem were observed in the relationship between motivation and affect. A self-improvement motive produced greater positive affect among HSEs compared to LSEs, while self-enhancement motives engendered positive affect more prominently among LSEs compared to HSEs. The paper also begins to distill a popular phenomenon, Facebook fatigue, in social comparison empirical work. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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