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Facebook Paradox? The Effects of Facebooking on Individuals' Social Relationships and Psychological Well-being

Posted on:2015-07-31Degree:M.SType:Thesis
University:Rutgers The State University of New Jersey - New BrunswickCandidate:Hu, XiaomengFull Text:PDF
GTID:2475390017499109Subject:Social psychology
Abstract/Summary:
Research suggests that Facebooking can be both beneficial and detrimental for users' psychological well-being ("Facebook Paradox"). However, the specific effects of Facebooking on individuals' social relationship satisfaction and psychological well-being remain inconclusive. Using structural equation modeling, causal pathways were examined between Facebook intensity, online and offline social relationship satisfaction, perceived social support, social interaction anxiety, and psychological well-being. Personality differences on each of those casual paths were also assessed. Employing a sample of 342 university students, results indicated that intensive Facebooking positively predicted users' psychological well-being through online social relationship satisfaction, and simultaneously negatively predicted users' psychological well-being through offline social relationship satisfaction. Furthermore, perceived social support mediated the path from Facebooking to psychological well-being, and social interaction anxiety mediated the path from offline social relationship satisfaction to psychological well-being. Taken together, the present study suggests that when and how Facebooking is helpful or harmful to users' psychological well-being depends on both user characteristics and online-offline social contexts.
Keywords/Search Tags:Psychological well-being, Social, Facebooking, Mediated the path
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