Qualité des relations interpersonnelles et utilisation de facebook chez les adultes émergents = Quality of interpersonal relationships and Facebook use among emerging adults
Contenu
Titre
Qualité des relations interpersonnelles et utilisation de facebook chez les adultes émergents = Quality of interpersonal relationships and Facebook use among emerging adults
Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science / Revue canadienne des sciences du comportement
Créateur
Élisabeth Camirand
François Poulin
Sujet
Emerging Adulthood
Facebook
Human Sex Differences
Interpersonal Relationships
Online Social Networks
Romance
emerging adult
interpersonal relations
social network
Résumé
The social network Facebook (FB) has a primary place in the social life of emerging adults. Studies that examine the link between offline interpersonal relations (IR) and the use of Facebook have been limited to evaluating that link as a function of the overall offline social network and not as a function of the different social players who make up that network. The objectives of this study are to evaluate: (a) to what extent the use of FB varies according to romantic status; (b) the link between the quality of offline IR (mother, father, best friend, lover) of emerging adults and their use of FB; (c) the moderating role of gender. A sample of 321 young adults (60.7% women, average age = 25.38 years) completed a questionnaire measuring FB use and two factors (intimacy and conflict) related to their offline IR. The results indicate that single people have a network of FB 'friends' consisting of more superficial relations than those who are part of a couple. In addition, FB seems to play a compensatory role in IR with a romantic partner or mother, while it appears to have a continuity role in IR with a best friend. Thus, the quality of IR with different members of the social network seems to be significantly and directly linked to the use of FB. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
volume
48
numéro
2
pages
101-111
Date
avril 2016
Titre abrégé
Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science / Revue canadienne des sciences du comportement
doi
10.1037/cbs0000023
issn
0008-400X
uri
Editeur
pdh
Source
2015-47634-001