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Young adults (male and female) who frequently comment on peers' facebook images are more likely than others to feel

User Janet
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Young adults (male and female) who frequently comment on peers face book images are more likely than others to feel a variety of emotions,

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Male and female young adults who frequently remark on their peers book photos may feel a variety of emotions, such as greater engagement and connection, possible pressure to fit in with norms, elevated self-esteem, stress or anxiety depending on the type of comment, and a need for approval from the online community.

Depending on the encounters' dynamics and personal experiences, the emotional impact can change.

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Young adults (male and female) who frequently comment on peers' face book images are more likely than others to feel.......

User Followben
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According to research, especially on the social trends that have arisen recently, due to the whole comments, and likes, in social media, it is possible that young adults, of either gender, who frequently comment on peers´ pages, especially the images, are more likely than others to feel that they have probably been left out from the events that are being depicted in the media, and they are also given to alter their personas online, to be able to achieve more acceptance from their peers online.

Although social media has become a good way, in many respects, to increase communication between people, it has also had its downsides. One of them is the phenomena known as the liking, which depends entirely on how a social media user influences others so that they are posting and sharing with them, and clicking likes. In many cases, this has led to a feeling, especially in young afults, of the need to alter themselves, and their online personas, to be better accepted, which has also translated into feelings of social inclusion. The facts show that people who are constantly commenting on pictures where they don´t see themselves included, especially events where they have not been invited, makes them feel excluded, and sometimes, socially unaccepted.

User Madelin
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