Athens, Ga.
– A new University
of Georgia study suggests
that online social networking sites such as Facebook might be useful tools for
detecting whether someone is a narcissist.
“We found that people who are narcissistic use Facebook in a
self-promoting way that can be identified by others,” said lead author Laura
Buffardi, a doctoral student in psychology who co-authored the study with
associate professor W. Keith Campbell.
The researchers, whose results appear in the October issue
of the journal Personality and Social
Psychology Bulletin, gave personality questionnaires to nearly 130 Facebook
users, analyzed the content of the pages and had untrained strangers view the
pages and rate their impression of the owner’s narcissism.
The researchers found that the number of Facebook friends
and wallposts that individuals have on their profile pages correlates with
narcissism. Buffardi said this is consistent with how narcissists behave in the
real-world, with numerous yet shallow relationships. Narcissists are also more
likely to choose glamorous, self-promoting pictures for their main profile
photos, she said, while others are more likely to use snapshots.
Untrained observers were able to detect narcissism, too. The
researchers found that the observers used three characteristics – quantity of
social interaction, attractiveness of the individual and the degree of self
promotion in the main photo – to form an impression of the individual’s
personality. “People aren’t perfect in their assessments,” Buffardi said, “but
our results show they’re somewhat accurate in their judgments.”
Narcissism is a trait of particular interest, Campbell said, because it
hampers the ability form healthy, long-term relationships. “Narcissists might
initially be seen as charming, but they end up using people for their own
advantage,” Campbell
said. “They hurt the people around them and they hurt themselves in the long
run.”
The tremendous growth of social networking sites – Facebook
now has 100 million users, for example – has led psychologists to explore how
personality traits are expressed online. Buffardi and Campbell chose Facebook
because it’s the most popular networking site among college students and
because it has a fixed format that makes it easier for researchers to compare
user pages.
Some researchers in the past have found that personal Web
pages are more popular among narcissists, but Campbell said there’s no evidence that
Facebook users are more narcissistic than others.
“Nearly all of our students use Facebook, and it seems to be
a normal part of people’s social interactions,” Campbell said. “It just turns out that
narcissists are using Facebook the same way they use their other relationships
– for self promotion with an emphasis on quantity of over quality.”
Still, he points out that because narcissists tend to have
more contacts on Facebook, any given Facebook user is likely to have an online
friend population with a higher proportion of narcissists than in the real
world. Right now it’s too early to predict if or how the norms of online
self-promotion will change, Campbell
said, since the study of social networking sites is still in its infancy.
“We’ve undergone a social change in the last four or five
years and now almost every student manages their relationships through Facebook
– something that few older people do,” Campbell
said. “It’s a completely new social world that we’re just beginning to
understand.”
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