Facebook Can Improve Self-Esteem

Using Facebook can have a positive influence on the self-esteem of college students, according to a new study from researchers at Cornell University. This is probably because Facebo...
Facebook Can Improve Self-Esteem
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  • Using Facebook can have a positive influence on the self-esteem of college students, according to a new study from researchers at Cornell University.

    This is probably because Facebook allows them to put their best face forward, said Jeffrey Hancock, associate professor of communication at Cornell University and co-author of “Mirror, Mirror on my Facebook Wall: Effects of Exposure to Facebook on Self-Esteem” published in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking.

    Jeff-Hancock Hancock said users can choose what they reveal about themselves and filter anything that might reflect badly. Feedback from friends posted publicly on Facebook profiles also tends to be positive, which can further boost self-esteem, he said.

    “Unlike a mirror, which reminds us of who we really are and may have a negative effect on self-esteem if that image does match with our ideal, Facebook can show a positive version of ourselves,” Hancock said. “We’re not saying that it’s a deceptive version of self, but it’s a positive one.”

    In the study, 63 Cornell students were left alone in the university’s Social Media Lab; they were seated either at computers that showed their Facebook profiles or at computers that were turned off. Some of the off computers had a mirror propped against the screen; others had no mirror.

    Those on Facebook were allowed to spend three minutes on the page, viewing only their own profiles and tabs. They were then given a questionnaire designed to measure their self-esteem.

    Participants looking in a mirror and those in control groups were given the same questionnaire.

     Those who had used Facebook gave much more positive feedback about themselves. Those who had edited their Facebook profiles had the highest-self esteem.

    “For many people, there’s an automatic assumption that the Internet is bad. This is one of the first studies to show that there’s a psychological benefit of Facebook,” Hancock said.

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