Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
351583 | Computers in Human Behavior | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Based on theory and previous research, we examined relationships among gender, social anxiety, self-disclosure, quality of real-world friendships and online communication by Chinese adolescent Internet users. Results indicated that online communication and self-disclosure are not related to quality of friendship, and online communication is positively related to self-disclosure. For adolescent boys and adolescents with high social anxiety, online communication can explain more variance in users’ self-disclosure, indicating that gender and social anxiety moderate the relationship between online communication and online self-disclosure.
► We examined the predictive effect of online communication on self-disclosure. ► We examined if gender and social anxiety affect this predictive effect. ► Gender moderates the relationship between online communication and self-disclosure. ► Anxiety moderates online communication’s predictive effect on self-disclosure.