Anonymity and Online Self-Disclosure: A Meta-Analysis

  • Main
  • Anonymity and Online Self-Disclosure: A...

Anonymity and Online Self-Disclosure: A Meta-Analysis

Cathlin V. Clark-Gordon, Nicholas D. Bowman, Alan K. Goodboy, & Alyssa Wright
Sukakah anda buku ini?
Bagaimana kualiti fail ini?
Muat turun buku untuk menilai kualitinya
Bagaimana kualiti fail yang dimuat turun?

When an individual is anonymous online, they may communicate more boldly than they

would in a face-to-face situation—a phenomenon called the online disinhibition effect.

While much is known about the toxic effects of online disinhibition, social effects (such as

self-disclosure) receive less scholarly attention. This meta-analysis (k = 14, random effects

assumed) examined the relationship between anonymity and online self-disclosure as

a form of benign disinhibition. Results indicated anonymity had a positive average

correlation with self-disclosure (r = .184). However, there was substantial heterogeneity

across studies that could not be explained by moderators including type of anonymity

(visual or discursive), the measure of self-disclosure (self-report or content analysis), or the

type of interaction task (social, task, none present).

Jilid:
32
Tahun:
2019
Edisi:
2
Penerbit:
Routledge
Bahasa:
english
Halaman:
15
Nama siri:
Communication Reports
Fail:
PDF, 249 KB
IPFS:
CID , CID Blake2b
english, 2019
Baca dalam Talian
Penukaran menjadi sedang dijalankan
Penukaran menjadi gagal

Istilah utama