Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE TO THE PAPERBACK EDITION
- 1 THE INTERNET IN A PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTEXT
- 2 YOUR ONLINE PERSONA: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF IMPRESSION FORMATION
- 3 ONLINE MASKS AND MASQUERADES
- 4 GROUP DYNAMICS IN CYBERSPACE
- 5 INTERGROUP CONFLICT AND COOPERATION
- 6 FLAMING AND FIGHTING: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF AGGRESSION ON THE NET
- 7 LIKING AND LOVING ON THE NET: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF INTERPERSONAL ATTRACTION
- 8 PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF INTERNET PORNOGRAPHY
- 9 THE INTERNET AS A TIME SINK
- 10 ALTRUISM ON THE NET: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF HELPING
- 11 GENDER ISSUES ON THE NET
- 12 NURTURING LIFE ON THE INTERNET
- Index
2 - YOUR ONLINE PERSONA: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF IMPRESSION FORMATION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- PREFACE TO THE PAPERBACK EDITION
- 1 THE INTERNET IN A PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTEXT
- 2 YOUR ONLINE PERSONA: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF IMPRESSION FORMATION
- 3 ONLINE MASKS AND MASQUERADES
- 4 GROUP DYNAMICS IN CYBERSPACE
- 5 INTERGROUP CONFLICT AND COOPERATION
- 6 FLAMING AND FIGHTING: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF AGGRESSION ON THE NET
- 7 LIKING AND LOVING ON THE NET: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF INTERPERSONAL ATTRACTION
- 8 PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF INTERNET PORNOGRAPHY
- 9 THE INTERNET AS A TIME SINK
- 10 ALTRUISM ON THE NET: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF HELPING
- 11 GENDER ISSUES ON THE NET
- 12 NURTURING LIFE ON THE INTERNET
- Index
Summary
Consultants eager to help us create the right impression abound, whether the goal is to impress a personnel officer, get elected to public office, make a sale over the telephone, or get a date. The tips they offer might include “Show confidence with a strong handshake” for a job interview, or “Show interest with good eye contact” for the potential dating partner. The verbal and nonverbal nuances associated with our real-life personas – appropriate for each individual on different occasions with different audiences – have been explored in great depth in popular magazine articles, and also in psychological research.
Most of us enter cyberspace, however, giving little thought to the online persona – how we come across to the people with whom we interact online. Many times those people are already known to us because they are friends, family members, or business associates, and they will interpret whatever we project through email, discussion groups, or personal Web pages within the context of the familiar real-life personas. If we sound harsh or abrupt in an email, they may temper any conclusions based on what they already know about us. Increasingly, however, the online persona is playing a larger role in first impressions as people rely on email, Web sites, and discussion forums more for the first contact, and the phone call, letter, or face-to-face meetings less. For some Internet relationships, communication starts on the net and later develops in other environments.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Psychology of the Internet , pp. 14 - 37Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999