If you’re feeling incredibly upset or just completely out of sorts about something someone posted about you on Facebook, you’re not alone.
Study experts at Northwestern University decided to dig deeper about the various types of unpleasant situations that take place on Mr Zuckerberg’s creation. The study was so comprehensive that these findings will be presented in February at the ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing in Baltimore. (No, I’m not kidding.)
“Almost every participant in the study could describe something that happened on Facebook in the past six months that was embarrassing or made them feel awkward or uncomfortable,” said Jeremy Birnholtz, one of the authors of the paper. “We were interested in the strength of the emotional response to this type of encounter.”
And here’s what these communication pros discovered – there were two types of people who especially violated by bothersome posts (such as an unflattering photo of themselves): Those with an eclectic group of FB “friends” (i.e. friends, relatives, clients, former hook-ups, hopeful hook-ups) and those people with superb Internet skills who were extremely concerned about their online persona.
However, volunteers who labelled themselves to be proficient at Facebook were less likely to be troubled by such a “face threat.”
The four types of “face threats” are as follows:
Norm violations (experienced by 45% of users): Certain behaviour is exposed. For example: “I met some friends for brunch and now other friends are pissed off at me.”
Ideal self-presentation violations (experienced by 29% of users): Inconsistent behaviour is exposed. For example: “My boyfriend posted about how I guzzled down wine and my mother has no idea that I enjoy drinking.”