Title: I, Me, Mine: Identity, Disclosure,
1I, Me, MineIdentity, Disclosure, the Self
- Michael C. Habib
- JOMC 391.3
- November 1, 2005
2Can You See the Real Me?Activation and
Expression of the True Self on the
InternetBargh, J.A., McKenna, K.Y.A.,
Fitzsimmons, G.M. (2002)
- Public persona vs. unconscious self (Jung, 1953)
- Actual self vs. true self (Rogers, 1951)
- Actual self Expression of self in social
interactions. - True self Complete psychological existence of
self. - IF The internet is a place where individuals
can explore alternative, yet currently existing,
conceptions of self (Turkle, 1995). - THEN People will use the internet to express
their true selves.
3Internet facilitates self-expression
- Anonymity
- Free of social expectations and constraints.
- Reduction of risks and social sanctions.
- Costs of revealing taboo things about oneself
disappear outside of ones established social
sphere. - Leads to self-disclosure
- Strangers on a train (Ruben, 1975)
- Then friendship
- Disclosing ones true self leads to feelings
of empathy and understanding between oneself and
the other. - Being able to disclose ones true self through
CMC might then lead to close relationships.
4If validation of ones true self is desirable,
then people will naturally use the internet to
express their true selves to others.
- H1a Ones conceptions of his/her true self
should be more accessible cognitively during an
initial interaction with a stranger over CMC than
during an initial FtF interaction. - H1b In the initial FtF interaction, the actual
self concept will be more accessible than in the
CMC interaction. - H2a One will better present their true self
in the initial CMC interaction than in a FtF,
thus causing the CMC partner to form an
impression closer to the that of ones true
self than ones actual self. - H2b Following an initial positive impression,
one will like the CMC partner more than in an
initial FtF interaction.
5Experiment 1 Methodology
- Speeded self-judgment, reaction time to
- Me/Not-Me (Markus, 1977)
- 35 words chosen from normative likability ratings
(Anderson, 1968) and 10 words from participant
generated list of actual self and true self
identifiers. - N46 (16 same sex pairs and 7 cross-sex pairs)
6Results and analysis
- 2 (interaction mode CMC or FtF)
- x 2 (interaction length 5 or 15 min.)
- x 2 (self-concept actual vs. true)
- x 2 (participated within pair)
- repeated measures ANOVA
- w/ first two as between-participants and
- second two as within-participants.
7Significant interactions
H1a H2a confirmed
8Experiment 2
- Purpose Was the anticipation of a CMC vs. FtF
interaction or the interaction itself cause for
the results from experiment one? - Method
- Participants perform Me/Not-Me with anticipation
of, but no actual interaction (time of
anticipation remained the same as in Exp. 1) - Control group was added who anticipated nothing.
- Results
- 3 (anticipated interaction type) x 2
(self-concept) - No significant effect accept that actual self
was more accessible then true self across all
conditions. - H1a and H1b re-confirmed
9Experiment 3 Method
- H2a and H2b should hold true because
- Greater ease of expressing ones true self in
CMC vs. FtF. - On account of the lack of traditional impression
forming cues, one will also be freer to imagine
an idealized version of the other. - N40 (20 male, 20 female)
- Cross-sex pairs meet for 40min
- Actual self measure, true self measure, ideal
partner measure, ideal friend measure, and liking
of partner measure.
10Self-presentation measures
Support for H2a
11Liking and projection of ideals
- CMC partners liked each other significantly more
than in FtF condition. - H2b supported for friendship but not romance.
Projected ideals of friend in CMC but not FtF
condition. - No differences on projection between CMC and FtF
independent of initial liking.
12Questions
- In an on-line social sphere that is a 'usual
social sphere' do the findings of this study
hold? I would suggest that they do not. Will the
presentation of a true self over CMC give way to
a presentation of the actual-self over time? (TJ)
- For example Facebook (Mike)
- What is the topic for those interactions in the
experiments. The sensitivity of the topic might
influence the result (sensitive topic, more
actual self non-sensitive topic, more real
self). (Cong) - Might participants have guided the conversation
themselves based on their increased comfort
levels. However, I too wish they had covered
this (Mike).
13Another question
- It is not just that people are willing to present
their true selves, but we need to examine the
opposite why is it that we are not willing
accept people's true selves in ftf communication?
There must be something that we do that prevents
other people from feeling comfortable to be
themselves. - When I teach listening skills to executives, I
teach them to stop talking and stop thinking
about what they will say next and start truly
listening to the other person and what they have
to say. - Maybe another experiment could include a
listening skills session in both cmc and ftf
environments to see if there is a difference in
the way people both transmit and receive the true
selves of others. (Karen)
14Impression Formation in Computer-Mediated
Communication RevisitedAn Analysis of the
Breadth and Intensity of ImpressionsHancock,
J.T., Dunham, P.J. (2001)
- Cues filtered-out (CFO) theories
- CMC lacks necessary cues for developing personal
relations and clear impressions. - Social Identification/Deindividuation (SIDE)
model - Lack of cues leads to increased reliance on
existing cues for impression formation. - Impressions reflect social categorization
techniques such as stereotyping. - Social information-processing (SIP) theory
- Because of the limited cues, impression forming
is slower in CMC than FtF, but levels out over
time.
15Hyperpersonal model
- Like in SIDE, stereotyping based off limited
cues. - But, people also participate in
self-presentation to control what cues they send
out. - Unlike CFO, people can put additional resources
into word choice, content, and self-presentation.
16Hypotheses
- H1 After an initial interaction, CMC
participants will confidently rate partners on
fewer characteristics than FtF participants will.
(CFO and Hyperpersonal) - H2a CMC participants will make more intense
attributions about the characteristics they rate
than FtF participants. (Hyperpersonal) - H2b CMC participants will give relatively
neutral ratings. (CFO)
17Experiment
- N84 randomly paired to complete task
- NEO-Five Factor Inventory
- Neuroticism, Extraversion, Openness,
Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness. - 60 items, 12 for each trait.
- Six choices including neutral and cannot make
judgment. - Number answered ? Breadth index
- Deviation from neutral point ? Intensity index
18Results H1 Supported
- 2 (communicative environment) x 5 (trait) mixed
General Linear Model for Breadth and again for
Intensity. - CMC participants answered significantly fewer
questions per trait. - Differences b/w CMC and FtF existed for
Extraversion, Agreeableness, Neuroticism (more
visual traits?). - But not for Openness and Conscientiousness (less
visible traits?) - CMC answered 59 of items while FtF answered
74.6
19H2a Supported, but not H2b
- Intensity was significantly greater in CMC
condition. - Interaction was consistent for all traits.
20What next?
- Change over time? (to support the rest of the
hyperpersonal model and SIP). - If given reason and time, would participants
develop methods to overcome the lack of cues? - Would this intensify self-presented traits, or
would intensity level out over time?
21Questions
- Hancock and Dunham all but beg for follow up
study I propose a study that looks at
impression formation over time to test the
hyperpersonal theories assertion that initial,
stereotypical and extreme impressions of
conversation partners will settle over time,
becoming more realistic as cues are introduced.
(TJ) - We might be able to tell more in a text-based
environment than in ftf because we control what
the other person finds out. In ftf environment,
they might not get a good grasp of who we are in
a first meeting--just like dating, takes time to
get to know a person. What if we did this study
over time, to find out how their judgments
changed after getting to know and work with
another person? (Karen)
22More Questions
- Impression formation in CMC revisited? The
authors instructed participants in CMC conditions
not to reveal their names, gender, or age. I am
wondering why the authors did not let
participants to reveal their gender. Since gender
is obvious in the face-to-face condition, why
they intentionally create this difference across
the CMC and FTF conditions? - The authors stated that they did this to
optimize deindividuation, a future study could
look at how individual cues effect outcomes.
Age, sex, and location is usually the first thing
asked when meeting someone in a chat room.
23e-PerceptionsPersonality Impressions Based on
Personal WebsitesVazire, S., Gosling, S.D. (2004)
- Two ways personality is manifested in physical
environment - Identity claims
- Behavioral residue
- Impressions gained through these have been shown
to converge with what people are actually like. - These two mechanisms need to be analyzed
separately. - Personal web sites are chosen as examples of
virtual space consisting of almost entirely
identity claims.
24Research Questions on Personal Websites.
- Consensus Do they provide a coherent,
interpretable message to readers. - Likely yes, because they are highly structured
and constructed of symbols holding shared
meanings. - Accuracy Do they convey their message
accurately. - Likely yes, because people form accurate
impressions quickly and easily given little
information and these sites have lots of
information. - Impression Management Do they convey an overly
positive message? - Specifically, do site authors try to present
their idealized self instead of their normal self?
25Method
- 11 reviewers made recorded personality
impressions for 89 websites. - Accuracy was determined by comparison with an
Accuracy index combining self-report and
informants (friends). - Ideal-self was collected from site authors.
- Five-factor model used (44 factor Big Item
Inventory).
26Results
- Question 1 Consistency measures were positive
and significant for all 5 factors. - Openness and Extraversion displayed the
strongest consistency, and Emotional Stability
the weakest. - Question 2 Accuracy correlations were also all
positive and significant. - A number of possible influencing factors were
analyzed and only gender had any effect. Gender
significantly accounted for ratings of
Agreeableness and Openness. This was in addition
to the Accuracy correlation for those factors. - Question 3 Extraversion and Agreeableness
showed effects of impression formation.
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29I didnt understand why this was particularly
relevant.
30Questions
- Can we use the same examination of corporate
websites to determine the self-concept or image
the firm is 1) intending to convey and 2) is
observed to convey? This is important for both
profit and nonprofit firms who are trying to
portray themselves in a certain way, but may not
understand that e-perceptions are being made
about them by what they reveal or do not reveal.
(Karen) - the researcher might consider categorizing the
personal web sites further into more specific
types. For example, many academic personal pages
fit the definition on p. 125 but do not have much
to tell about the authors personality while many
creative sites do. (Shirong, Sanghee also
expressed concern about this) - What if they analyzed profiles from social
networking sites instead? These have the express
purpose of presenting oneself to the world.
Blogs on personal issues also would work well,
but analysis might be more difficult. (Mike)
31Dont Blame the ComputerWhen Self-Disclosure
Moderates the Self-Service BiasMoon, Y. (2003)
- Internal vs. External (Heider, 1958)
- Is the self responsible or some environmental
factor? - Self-serving bias
- When there is a positive outcome, external
factors are responsible. - When there is a negative outcome, the self gets
the credit.
32Why the Self-Serving Bias?
- Possibly an information processing deficiency?
- However, most evidence points to the human need
for ego enhancement. - How does this translate in an HCI situation?
33Interpersonal Contextsan Exception to
Self-Serving bias
- When individuals partake in intimate
self-disclosure (sharing of high-risk
information) with one another, self-serving bias
is diminished. - Intimate self-disclosure ? attraction
- Attraction ? including the other within ones
concept of self and thus protect their ego as
well. - Given the media equation, does this behavior
extend in to HCI scenarios?
34Hypotheses
- H1 Users will be more likely to blame the
computer when there is a negative outcome than
when there is a positive outcome. - H2a After having engaged in self-disclosure
with a computer, users are more likely to credit
the computer when there is a positive outcome,
than when they have not previously disclosed
information to the computer. - H2b After having engaged in self-disclosure
with a computer, users are less likely to blame
the computer credit when there is a negative
outcome, than when they have not previously
disclosed information to the computer. - H3 The relation between self-disclosure and
attributional tendencies predicted in H2a and H2b
will be partially mediated by the level of
attraction users feel toward the computer.
35Experiment 1 Method
- All users participate in intimate
self-disclosure, then filler task, then some
perform the purchasing task on either the
original computer or a different computer. - Disclosure-reciprocity norms Computer shared
information about itself, asked gradually more
intimate questions, - 2 (computer type same or different)
- x 2 (outcome positive or negative)
- between subjects full factorial.
- Told successful completion of task would lead to
10 dollar reward.
36Measures and Results
- Attribution 1 2 questions, 10 pt scale,
who/what was more responsibleself or computer? - Attribution 2 2 questions, 10 pt scale, the
computer contributed heavily agree or disagree? - H1, H2a and H2b Supported by both Attribution 1
and 2.
37Positive Outcome
38Experiment 2 Method
- All participants use the same computer in Tasks 1
and 3. - Three types of disclosure
- RECIP (disclosure-reciprocity)
- NoRECIP (random order, Computer does not
disclose) - LG (same as NoRECIP but using same number of
words as RECIP) - User supposed to disclose more to RECIP which
will mediate affection and attributional
tendencies.
39Results of Experiment 1 Replicated
- Manipulation worked Disclosure was
significantly higher for RECIP and H1 and H2 were
further supported.
40H3 Supported
- Liking (attraction) measured after Task 1
- Self-disclosure had a significant effect on
liking, with participants liking the computer
more in the RECIP condition. - The effect of self-disclosure on Attributions
then re-tested with liking as a covariate. - The effect of Liking on Attributions 1 and 2 was
significant in both the positive and negative
conditions. - ? Thus attraction partially mediated
attributional tendencies.
41Possible Applications
- Traditionally, it is assumed that users only like
significant self-disclosure if they are to get
some functionality in return. - Furthermore, it is traditionally assumed that
having disclosed information, users have higher
expectations for the system. - However, this study suggests that the act of
self-disclosure can, in some cases, increase both
attraction and praise and decrease criticism of a
system. - Will this hold true in the real world with
privacy and confidentiality concerns, etc. - Attraction caused by other factors may accomplish
the same goals.
42Questions
- The alternate prediction is that consumers who
engage in self-disclosure will be more forgiving
in their expectations of performance This causes
me to wonder what motivates users to divulge
intimate personal information. Are there a
variety of reasons? If a user is not expecting a
pay-off from a commercial site what compels them
to provide personal information? - Might it be the True Self effect? (Mike)
- Recommendation systems like Amazon.com come to
mind. People put tons of personal information in
the system. Does that act of self-disclosure
endear people to the site? (Mike)
43Questions
- I would be interested in seeing the computers
answers to the 15 questions and their
computer-disclosures. From whose perspective
the experimenters typed in the computers
answers? From a machines only or a personalized
AI/another human being? If the former, people
treat machines as machines but unconsciously give
it some human-like characteristicsit becomes an
HCI question. If the latter, people actually
treat machines as other human beings whose name
are represented as computersit becomes a CMC
question, to a certain degree. (Shirong)