Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Beat This! You Just Can't Have More Than 200 Friends On Facebook

IANS, 20 Jan, 2016 11:08 AM
    If someone claims that he or she has over 1,000 friends on Facebook, he or she is probably lying.
     
    According to an interesting research, the average number of real close friends people have on the social networking site is less than 200, and here too women triumph with more genuine friends than men.
     
    According to psychologist professor Robin Dunbar from the University of Oxford who conducted two surveys, among regular social media users, the average number of friends they had on Facebook was 155 in the first survey and 183 in the second.
     
    Women had more friends than men (in the first sample, women averaged 166 and men just 145 friends; in the second, it was 196 vs 157) while - perhaps unsurprisingly - older generations had fewer friends than younger ones, Dunbar found.
     
    According to him, social media certainly help to slow down the natural rate of decay in relationship quality that would set in once we cannot readily meet friends face-to-face.
     
    "But no amount of social media will prevent a friend eventually becoming 'just another acquaintance' if you don't meet face-to-face from time to time,” Dunbar explained in a paper published in Royal Society Open Science journal.
     
    "There is something paramount about face-to-face interactions that is crucial for maintaining friendships. Seeing the white of their eyes from time to time seems to be crucial to the way we maintain friendships,” he added.
     
     
    Offline, research has given rise to what's called the Social Brain Hypothesis. This says that our brain's ability to process multiple relationships creates a natural group size of 100-200 people for humans.
     
    This size is also constrained by the time required to maintain relationships - we only have so much time to devote to meeting or talking to people.
     
    Social media may seem to be a way to make and maintain hundreds of friendships.
     
    It has been suggested that social media might overcome the constraints because posts, tweets and pictures allow us to talk to many more people at the same time even if the interaction is not direct.
     
    This prompted Dunbar to carry out two surveys of more than 3,300 people to see whether using the Internet really means we can have more friends.
     
    The first survey group, made up of regular social media users, considered only 28 percent of their Facebook friends to be “genuine” (close) friends.
     
    While a few people did have much larger groups of online “friends” on Facebook, they had similar sized support and sympathy groups to others.
     
    This suggests that when social media seem to allow someone to have more friends, it is because looser acquaintances were being included in the 'friend' category.
     
     
    "The research shows that face-to-face interaction is essential for truly authentic relationships and that shares, selfies and 'likes' are no replacement for the bonding that takes place while sharing food, experiences and anecdotes,” informed Sue Fudge, director at Dorset bakers Thomas J. Fudge's.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Upload 'Average' Photo For Better Smartphone Recognition

    Upload 'Average' Photo For Better Smartphone Recognition
    Does your smartphone fail to recognise you at times when you try to use "face unlock" system? Upload an "average" photo of yourself for better recognition.

    Upload 'Average' Photo For Better Smartphone Recognition

    'Facebook Generation' Happier Than Teenagers A Decade Ago

    'Facebook Generation' Happier Than Teenagers A Decade Ago
    Today's "Facebook Generation" is happier and healthier than teenagers a decade ago, finds a new study. Adolescence is a crucial stage in life when you lay the foundation for adulthood.

    'Facebook Generation' Happier Than Teenagers A Decade Ago

    Live-streaming Apps Having A Moment As Twitter Launches Periscope On Heels Of Meerkat Buzz

    Live-streaming Apps Having A Moment As Twitter Launches Periscope On Heels Of Meerkat Buzz
    NEW YORK — Download Periscope, Twitter's just-launched live video-streaming app, and you'll find people broadcasting all sorts of mundane stuff: waiting for AT&T to fix their wiring, getting out of bed in Silicon Valley, looking outside their office window in Chicago.

    Live-streaming Apps Having A Moment As Twitter Launches Periscope On Heels Of Meerkat Buzz

    Watch Out Apple: Luxury Timepiece Maker Tag Heuer To Make Smartwatches With Google And Intel

    Watch Out Apple: Luxury Timepiece Maker Tag Heuer To Make Smartwatches With Google And Intel
    NEW YORK — Watch out Apple: Swiss company Tag Heuer is developing its own smartwatch with tech rivals Google and Intel.

    Watch Out Apple: Luxury Timepiece Maker Tag Heuer To Make Smartwatches With Google And Intel

    Do Parents Share Excessively About Kids On Social Media?

    Do Parents Share Excessively About Kids On Social Media?
    You love to share the pics and videos of your kid's antics on social media. But are you ending up sharing too much? A lot of parents say yes.

    Do Parents Share Excessively About Kids On Social Media?

    Photo Sharing On Social Media Killing Real-life Enjoyment

    Photo Sharing On Social Media Killing Real-life Enjoyment
    Is your penchant for sharing photos on social networking sites preventing you from enjoying real life experiences? May be, suggests a new study.

    Photo Sharing On Social Media Killing Real-life Enjoyment