What do social networks tell people? What We Can Learn About Them

Most people use at least one form of social networking. If you are reading this, you are probably using social networking on your own, and you have contacts that start with people you know very closely, such as your family and close friends, the people you have met only a few times or do not [...]
Most people use at least one form of social networking. If you are reading this, you are probably using social networks yourself and have contacts that you are familiar with, such as your family and close friends, in people you have only met a few times or have not had contact with.
What can we learn about people from their social networks? Despite opportunities to control what we post and treat an image, the study suggests that, for the most part, social networking profiles reflect people's true personality, not self - possessed versions.

Five Great Personalityities
A large group of research on the use and personality of social networks has focused on personality traits Big 5, the theory of the most widely accepted traits. When people are asked to appreciate how many different traits characterize them, those traits accumulate into five groups:
Association, energy sense from interactions with others, acceptance, warmth, and cooperation.
Studies show that personality is linked to specific types of content that people post. Despite the general tendency that social networking profiles accurately reflect personality, there is evidence that these profiles are less accurate for people with high neurotism who are more likely to present idealized or less authentic images of themselves.
Personality predicts what people use in social media.
Researchers have used specialized software programs to analyze the language people use in their posts on social networks. In such a study, researchers used computer algorithms to determine which words were unique to different personality traits.
The words envisioning high extraversion levels included “Love”, “nate” and “aheng” are words that reflect social activity or relations.
On the other hand, those with lower levels of extraction were more likely to use the words “computer”, “I have” and “I don't make”, reflecting a greater focus of myself and a preference for activities that involve more than people.
The very conscious people were more likely to use the words “family”, “v” and “These choices indicate their inclination to plan and focus family responsibilities.
People with a low conscience were more likely to use word of oath, showing a lack of care for what they post. Not surprisingly, pleased individuals used more positive words, and less favorable people used more negative or hostile words.












