Who is Really Happier? Re-examining the Portrayal of Happiness on Social Media and the Persistence of Misperception

Authors: Elfadl, A., Alshakhsi, S., Panourgia, C. and Ali, R.

Journal: GOOD PRACTICES AND NEW PERSPECTIVES IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGIES, VOL 1, WORLDCIST 2024

Volume: 985

Pages: 214-226

eISSN: 2367-3389

ISBN: 978-3-031-60214-6

ISSN: 2367-3370

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-60215-3_21

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39834/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Who is Really Happier? Re-Examining the Portrayal of Happiness on Social Media and the Persistence of Misperception

Authors: Elfadl, A., Alshakhsi, S., Panourgia, C. and Ali, R.

Conference: WorldCIST 2024

Dates: 26-28 March 2024

Abstract:

Growing concerns have been raised regarding the potential influence of social media on mental health and well-being, specifically focusing on the phenomenon of social comparison. Prior research has shown that individuals tend to overestimate the happiness portrayed in others’ social media posts, resulting in negative outcomes such as low mood, reduced self-esteem, and diminished life satisfaction. However, given the nearly two-decade surge of social media, we question whether this trend persists. This study aims to investigate whether indi- viduals still perceive others’ happy posts as happier than their own happy posts on social media, while also exploring potential age and gender differences. Self- reported happiness is a person's perception of their own level of happiness, while perceived happiness is the level of happiness, they believe other people are ex- periencing. Data was collected via an online survey completed by 314 partici- pants. A mixed ANOVA revealed a significant misperception of happiness, indi- cating, against the current literature, that individuals tend to overestimate their own happiness compared to the happiness expressed by others in social media posts. Gender emerged as a significant factor influencing happiness mispercep- tion, with males reporting higher levels of self-reporting happiness than their hap- piness. A significant difference between the age groups was found and indicated that the older age group (25-64 years) demonstrated a significantly higher happi- ness misperception than the emerging adult group (15-24 years). The study re- veals new insights on happiness misperception in social media, impacting well- being and social bonding, particularly among males and adults, and altering per- ceptions of online emotional expressions.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39834/

Source: Manual

Who is Really Happier? Re-Examining the Portrayal of Happiness on Social Media and the Persistence of Misperception

Authors: Elfadl, A., Alshakhsi, S., Panourgia, C. and Ali, R.

Conference: WorldCIST 2024

Dates: 26-28 March 2024

Abstract:

Growing concerns have been raised regarding the potential influence of social media on mental health and well-being, specifically focusing on the phenomenon of social comparison. Prior research has shown that individuals tend to overestimate the happiness portrayed in others’ social media posts, resulting in negative outcomes such as low mood, reduced self-esteem, and diminished life satisfaction. However, given the nearly two-decade surge of social media, we question whether this trend persists. This study aims to investigate whether indi- viduals still perceive others’ happy posts as happier than their own happy posts on social media, while also exploring potential age and gender differences. Self- reported happiness is a person's perception of their own level of happiness, while perceived happiness is the level of happiness, they believe other people are ex- periencing. Data was collected via an online survey completed by 314 partici- pants. A mixed ANOVA revealed a significant misperception of happiness, indi- cating, against the current literature, that individuals tend to overestimate their own happiness compared to the happiness expressed by others in social media posts. Gender emerged as a significant factor influencing happiness mispercep- tion, with males reporting higher levels of self-reporting happiness than their hap- piness. A significant difference between the age groups was found and indicated that the older age group (25-64 years) demonstrated a significantly higher happi- ness misperception than the emerging adult group (15-24 years). The study re- veals new insights on happiness misperception in social media, impacting well- being and social bonding, particularly among males and adults, and altering per- ceptions of online emotional expressions.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39834/

Source: Manual

Who is Really Happier? Re-examining the Portrayal of Happiness on Social Media and the Persistence of Misperception.

Authors: ElFadl, A.H., Alshakhsi, S., Panourgia, C. and Ali, R.

Editors: Rocha, Á., Adeli, H., Dzemyda, G., Moreira, F. and Poniszewska-Maranda, A.

Journal: WorldCIST (1)

Volume: 985

Pages: 214-226

Publisher: Springer

ISBN: 978-3-031-60214-6

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39834/

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-60215-3

Source: DBLP

Who is Really Happier? Re-Examining the Portrayal of Happiness on Social Media and the Persistence of Misperception

Authors: Elfadl, A., Alshakhsi, S., Panourgia, C. and Ali, R.

Editors: Rocha, A., Adeli, H., Dzemyda, G., Moreira, F. and Poniszewska-Marańda, A.

Volume: 985

Pages: 214-226

Publisher: Springer

Place of Publication: Cham

ISBN: 9783031602146

Abstract:

Growing concerns have been raised regarding the potential influence of social media on mental health and well-being, specifically focusing on the phenomenon of social comparison. Prior research has shown that individuals tend to overestimate the happiness portrayed in others’ social media posts, resulting in negative outcomes such as low mood, reduced self-esteem, and diminished life satisfaction. However, given the nearly two-decade surge of social media, we question whether this trend persists. This study aims to investigate whether indi- viduals still perceive others’ happy posts as happier than their own happy posts on social media, while also exploring potential age and gender differences. Self- reported happiness is a person's perception of their own level of happiness, while perceived happiness is the level of happiness, they believe other people are ex- periencing. Data was collected via an online survey completed by 314 partici- pants. A mixed ANOVA revealed a significant misperception of happiness, indi- cating, against the current literature, that individuals tend to overestimate their own happiness compared to the happiness expressed by others in social media posts. Gender emerged as a significant factor influencing happiness mispercep- tion, with males reporting higher levels of self-reporting happiness than their hap- piness. A significant difference between the age groups was found and indicated that the older age group (25-64 years) demonstrated a significantly higher happi- ness misperception than the emerging adult group (15-24 years). The study re- veals new insights on happiness misperception in social media, impacting well- being and social bonding, particularly among males and adults, and altering per- ceptions of online emotional expressions.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39834/

Source: BURO EPrints