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Love for selfies decoded

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Washington DC

It’s now hard to imagine a life without selfies! Thanks to front-facing cameras and the rise of social media, selfies populate our camera rolls, Instagram feeds, dating profiles, and vocabularies.

To better understand the photographic phenomenon and how people form their identities online, Georgia Institute of Technology researchers combed through 2.5 million selfie posts on Instagram to determine what kinds of identity statements people make by taking and sharing selfies.

Nearly 52 per cent of all selfies fell into the appearance category: pictures of people showing off their make-up, clothes, lips, etc.

Pictures about looks were two times more popular than the other 14 categories combined.

After appearances, social selfies with friends, loved ones and pets were the most common (14 per cent). Then came ethnicity photos (13 per cent), travel (7 per cent), and health and fitness (5 per cent).

The researchers noted that the prevalence of ethnicity selfies (selfies about a person’s ethnicity, nationality or country of origin) is an indication that people are proud of their backgrounds.

They also found that most selfies are solo pictures, rather than taken with a group.

The data was gathered in the summer of 2015. The Georgia Tech team believes the study is the first large-scale empirical research on selfies.

Overall, an overwhelming 57 per cent of selfies on Instagram were posted by the 18-35-year-old crowd, something the researchers say isn’t too surprising considering the demographics of the social media platform.

The under-18 age group posted about 30 per cent of selfies. The older crowd (35+) shared them far less frequently (13 per cent). Appearance was most popular among all age groups.

Lead author Julia Deeb-Swihart says selfies are an identity performance – meaning that users carefully craft the way they appear online and that selfies are an extension of that. This is similar to William Shakespeare’s famous line: “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players.”

“Just like on other social media channels, people project an identity that promotes their wealth, health and physical attractiveness,” Deeb-Swihart said. “With selfies, we decide how to present ourselves to the audience, and the audience decides how it perceives you.”

This work is grounded in the theory presented by Erving Goffman in The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. The clothes we choose to wear and the social roles we play are all designed to control the version of ourselves we want our peers to see.

“Selfies, in a sense, are the blending of our online and offline selves,” Deeb-Swihart said. “It’s a way to prove what is true in your life, or at least what you want people to believe is true.” The researchers gathered the data by searching for “#selfie,” then used computer vision to confirm that the pictures actually included faces. Nearly half of them didn’t.

They found plenty of spam with blank images or text. The accounts were using the hash tag to show up in more searches to gain more followers.

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