Love taking selfies but not looking at them on social media? You are not alone - Hindustan Times
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Love taking selfies but not looking at them on social media? You are not alone

London | ByIANS
Feb 13, 2017 11:30 AM IST

In what has been named “selfie paradox”, people regularly take selfies but most don’t seem to like looking at them on social media.

In 2014, about 93 million selfies were taken each day. This is counting only those taken on Android devices. There’s obviously no doubt that selfies are enormously popular on social media. But a new study has found that while most of us may love taking selfies, not all of us like looking at them.

A new study has found that we like taking selfies but not looking at them.(Kunal Patil/HT PHOTO)
A new study has found that we like taking selfies but not looking at them.(Kunal Patil/HT PHOTO)

Most people would prefer to see fewer selfies on social media, the study has found. The findings showed that compared to the selfies taken by themselves, people attributed greater self-presentational motives and less authenticity to selfies taken by others.

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Selfies taken by themselves were also judged as self-ironic and more authentic. This phenomenon, where many people regularly take selfies but most people don’t appear to like them has been termed the “selfie paradox” by Sarah Diefenbach, Professor at Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Germany.

People take selfies against an installation during the inauguration ceremony of the recent Hindustan Times Kala Ghoda Art Festival in Mumbai. (Arijit Sen/HT Photo)
People take selfies against an installation during the inauguration ceremony of the recent Hindustan Times Kala Ghoda Art Festival in Mumbai. (Arijit Sen/HT Photo)

The team conducted an online survey of a total of 238 persons living in Austria, Germany and Switzerland to assess people’s motives and judgements when taking and viewing selfies. The results showed that 77 per cent of the participants regularly took selfies.

“One reason for this might be their fit with widespread self-presentation strategies such as self-promotion and self-disclosure,” Diefenbach said, in the paper published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology.

Interestingly, despite 77 per cent of the participants taking selfies regularly, 62-67 per cent agreed on the potential negative consequences of selfies, such as impacts on self-esteem. This negative perception of selfies was also illustrated by 82 per cent of participants indicating that they would rather see other types of photos instead of selfies on social media.

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