Users of Social Network Sites (SNS) use the networks to share content and information about themselves. In particular for “nonymous” SNS, such as Facebook, profiles are connected to real names and appearances: this increases the connection between online and offline identities and the relevance of audiences to the information users share. This can lead users to feel as though they are under someone's constant observation, which can have consequences on how they present themselves on the platform. In this paper, we explore how the perception of an imaginary audience, i.e. the “others” adolescents perceive to be as concerned with themselves as they are, can inform the impression management strategies of adult Facebook users. Based on a Dutch ...
Self-monitoring and public self-consciousness are two variables that contribute to self-presentation...
Impression management is a goal-directed conscious or unconscious process in which people attempt to...
Use of social networks is ubiquitous. We contend that a catalyst for using social networks is defini...
When people construct and share posts on social network sites like Facebook and Twitter, whom do the...
Facebook identity management implies a selective front and backstage: users perform multiple social ...
Facebook has become the social networking site of choice for young adults in Singapore, boasting hig...
Facebook identity management implies a selective front and backstage: users perform multiple social ...
[[abstract]]This study endeavors to examine the dynamics of impression management (IM) on social net...
Facebook identity management implies a selective front and backstage: users perform multiple social ...
To investigate how people form their identity on social networks, control the impressions they invok...
Abstract: With over 800 million users worldwide, the popular online social networking service, Faceb...
Social networking sites are a recent phenomenon and have experienced tremendous growth in popularity...
Sharing of personal information on the Internet has become increasingly popular. In social media int...
Abstract This research investigates user awareness and attitudes toward potential inferences of inf...
This one-year cyber-ethnography examines identity presentations and interpretations of 346 Faceboo...
Self-monitoring and public self-consciousness are two variables that contribute to self-presentation...
Impression management is a goal-directed conscious or unconscious process in which people attempt to...
Use of social networks is ubiquitous. We contend that a catalyst for using social networks is defini...
When people construct and share posts on social network sites like Facebook and Twitter, whom do the...
Facebook identity management implies a selective front and backstage: users perform multiple social ...
Facebook has become the social networking site of choice for young adults in Singapore, boasting hig...
Facebook identity management implies a selective front and backstage: users perform multiple social ...
[[abstract]]This study endeavors to examine the dynamics of impression management (IM) on social net...
Facebook identity management implies a selective front and backstage: users perform multiple social ...
To investigate how people form their identity on social networks, control the impressions they invok...
Abstract: With over 800 million users worldwide, the popular online social networking service, Faceb...
Social networking sites are a recent phenomenon and have experienced tremendous growth in popularity...
Sharing of personal information on the Internet has become increasingly popular. In social media int...
Abstract This research investigates user awareness and attitudes toward potential inferences of inf...
This one-year cyber-ethnography examines identity presentations and interpretations of 346 Faceboo...
Self-monitoring and public self-consciousness are two variables that contribute to self-presentation...
Impression management is a goal-directed conscious or unconscious process in which people attempt to...
Use of social networks is ubiquitous. We contend that a catalyst for using social networks is defini...