Author List: Krasnova, Hanna; Widjaja, Thomas; Buxmann, Peter; Wenninger, Helena; Benbasat, Izak;
Information Systems Research, 2015, Volume 26, Issue 3, Page 585-605.
Research findings on how participation in social networking sites (SNSs) affects users' subjective well-being are equivocal. Some studies suggest a positive impact of SNSs on users' life satisfaction and mood, whereas others report undesirable consequences such as depressive symptoms and anxiety. However, whereas the factors behind the positive effects have received significant scholarly attention, little is known about the mechanisms that underlie the unfavorable consequences. To fill this gap, this study uses social comparison theory and the responses of 1,193 college-age Facebook users to investigate the role of envy in the SNS context as a potential contributor to those undesirable outcomes. Arising in response to social information consumption, envy is shown to be associated with reduced cognitive and affective well-being as well as increased reactive self-enhancement. These preliminary findings contribute to the growing body of information systems research investigating the dysfunctional consequences of information technology adoption in general and social media participation in particular.
Keywords: envy ; self-enhancement ; social comparison theory ; social media ; social networking sites ; subjective well-being
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#234 0.228 social networks influence presence interactions network media networking diffusion implications individuals people results exchange paper sites evidence self-disclosure important examine
#93 0.136 performance results study impact research influence effects data higher efficiency effect significantly findings impacts empirical significant suggest outcomes better positive
#51 0.125 results study research experiment experiments influence implications conducted laboratory field different indicate impact effectiveness future participants evidence test controlled involving
#55 0.119 attributes credibility wikis tools wiki potential consequences gis potentially expectancy shaping exploring related anonymous attribute employing life comment comments 2.0
#116 0.108 research study influence effects literature theoretical use understanding theory using impact behavior insights examine influences mechanisms specifically context perspective findings
#40 0.062 increased increase number response emergency monitoring warning study reduce messages using reduced decreased reduction decrease act sessions cost good key
#127 0.054 systems information research theory implications practice discussed findings field paper practitioners role general important key grounded researchers domain new identified