Social Media Habits but Not Social Interaction Anxiety Predict Parasocial Relationships

Authors

  • Corinne P. Tatem Division of Psychology, University of the West of Scotland, UK
  • Joanne Ingram Division of Psychology, University of the West of Scotland, UK

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37256/jspr.1220221496

Keywords:

parasocial, social media, social media addiction, social interaction anxiety, celebrity

Abstract

With the rise in accessibility of media personae and celebrities through social media sites, parasocial relationships (PSRs) can offer a meaningful alternative for individuals who experience obstacles in forming real-life relationships. Existing research suggests that PSRs are multidimensional. Building on this, we considered how social media and social anxiety factors relate to the dimensions of PSRs. We examine whether social media engagement, social media addiction, and social interaction anxiety predict parasocial-love and parasocial-friendship. Participants (N = 239) responded to a questionnaire assessing multiple elements of PSRs, social interaction anxiety, social media engagement, and social media addiction. Results revealed social media addiction to be a significant predictor of parasocial-friendship and emotional aspects of parasocial-love. However, physical aspects of the parasocial-love were predicted by social media engagement. Social interaction anxiety was only associated with aspects of parasocial-love but did not predict this type of PSR. These findings suggest that developing a PSR may be strongly linked to social media use and foster social media addiction, whilst face-to-face social interaction anxiety may be less relevant to PSRs with celebrities. The current results also support the suggestion that PSRs with media personalities are multifaceted.

Author Biography

Corinne P. Tatem, Division of Psychology, University of the West of Scotland, UK

During completion of this research this author was based at University of the West of Scotland. This author is now based at the Department of Psychology, Glasgow Caledonian University, UK.

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Published

2022-10-19

How to Cite

Tatem, C. P., & Ingram, J. (2022). Social Media Habits but Not Social Interaction Anxiety Predict Parasocial Relationships. Journal of Social Psychology Research, 1(2), 198–211. https://doi.org/10.37256/jspr.1220221496