PsychBook Research

Collecting and analysing psychological research on the most popular social networking site in the world today.

Posts Tagged 'facebook'

How Facebook might reveal users’ attitudes toward work and relationships with coworkers.

How Facebook Might Reveal Users… [Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw. 2012] – PubMed – NCBI. With the spread of Facebook among people in many  countries, some companies have started using applicants’ Facebook profiles as a criterion of personnel selection, in an effort to identify good workers among job applicants. However, how using Facebook is connected to […]

2 January 2013 at 12:20 - Comments

Inside Facebook’s Outsourced Anti-Porn and Gore Brigade, Where Camel Toes are More Offensive Than Crushed Heads

            Take a good long read of this. Can you see how cyberbullying behaviours could slip through? What does it say about Facebook’s priorities? Inside Facebooks Outsourced Anti-Porn and Gore Brigade, Where Camel Toes are More Offensive Than Crushed Heads.

21 February 2012 at 16:38 - Comments

This changes everything, again: Facebook Timeline

From Mashable: Facebook Timeline has been on the back burner for months now, after it was first announced at the company’s f8 conference in September. Despite much delay, it is finally rolling out to the public , starting with New Zealand. That means it’s only a matter of days before it comes to you, so brace your […]

8 December 2011 at 08:15 - Comments

A tale of two sites: Twitter vs. Facebook and the personality predictors of social media usage

I’ve been waiting for this one for a while – really looking forward to getting my hands on it. Such a tease of an abstract… From Computers in Human Behavior Social networking sites (SNS) are quickly becoming one of the most popular tools for social interaction and information exchange. Previous research has shown a relationship […]

6 December 2011 at 18:48 - Comments

Self-disclosure and student satisfaction with Facebook

Interesting new study in Computers in Human Behaviour about students and Facebook. All the research seems to be heading this way. The purpose of the current study was to extend existing research examining the specific motives for creating and maintaining Facebook, and to connect these motives to users’ levels of self-disclosure and satisfaction with Facebook. […]

5 December 2011 at 13:00 - Comments