Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Rich People Have Less Facebook Friends From Abroad

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Sep, 2015 12:30 PM
    If you think people from higher social classes have more friends abroad, you are probably wrong. According to Facebook data, wealthy people globally have less Facebook friends from other countries and more friends from their home countries.
     
    The study by University of Cambridge, conducted in collaboration with Facebook, shows a correlation between people's social and financial status and the levels of internationalism in their friendship networks.
     
    “The findings point to the possibility that the wealthy stay more in their own social bubble but this is unlikely to be ultimately beneficial. If you are not engaging internationally then you will miss out on that international resource -- that flow of new ideas and information,” explained study co-author Dr Aleksandr Spectre from Cambridge.
     
    According to researchers, the results are in line with what's known as the “restricting social class” hypothesis.
     
    It means that high-social class individuals have greater resources and, therefore, depend less on others -- with the wealthy tending to be less socially engaged, particularly with those from groups other than their own, as a result.
     
    To understand this, the research team conducted two studies -- one local and one global.
     
    The global study used a dataset of billions of Facebook friendships.
     
    For the first study, the team recruited 857 people and asked them to self-report their perceived social status.
     
     
    The volunteers also provided researchers access to their Facebook networks.
     
    The results indicated that low-social class people have nearly 50 percent more international friends than high-social class people.
     
    For the second global study, the team approached Facebook directly who provided data on every friendship formed over the network in every country in the world at the national aggregate level for 2011.
     
    The dataset included over 57 billion friendships.
     
    The team again found a negative correlation between social class - this time on a national level - and the percentage of Facebook friends from other countries.
     
    “For people from low-social class countries, 35 percent of their friendships on average were international, compared to 28 percent average in high-social class countries,” the authors noted.
     
    The findings provide support for the “restricting social class” hypothesis at both local and global level.
     
    The results also highlight how those from lower social classes are taking advantage of platforms like Facebook to increase their social capital beyond national borders.
     
    The results were published in the journal Personality and Individual Differences.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Facebook Records One Billion Logins In A Day

    "We just passed an important milestone. For the first time ever, one billion people used Facebook in a single day," CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote on his Facebook page

    Facebook Records One Billion Logins In A Day

    Facebook Working On Personal Assistant 'M'

    Facebook Working On Personal Assistant 'M'
    Social networking giant Facebook on Thursday said it had started to test a new service called 'M' which is a digital personal assistant inside the messenger app.

    Facebook Working On Personal Assistant 'M'

    Mastercard Starts Selfie Payments Trial

    Mastercard Starts Selfie Payments Trial
    In the US, 200 participants will test the 'selfie pay' system that will be used to verify their identity via their self-portraits, IBS Intelligence online reported.

    Mastercard Starts Selfie Payments Trial

    Robot That Can Manipulate Its Grip

    Robot That Can Manipulate Its Grip
    A new robotic model developed by scientists, including an Indian-origin engineering student, can adjust its grip on objects.

    Robot That Can Manipulate Its Grip

    'India won't prove easy for Satya Nadella to push Windows 10'

    While some feel it may not be a super hit, despite a free update for those with versions above Wondows 7, others say it will prove more of use on devices other than personal computers, like smart phones, tablets and other hand-helds.

    'India won't prove easy for Satya Nadella to push Windows 10'

    Microsoft Slashes 7,800 Jobs, Mostly In Phones Unit

    Indian American CEO Satya Nadella-led Microsoft on Wednesday announced it was laying off 7,800 employees primarily in the phone business as part of a major overhaul aimed at focusing the company on its core businesses.

    Microsoft Slashes 7,800 Jobs, Mostly In Phones Unit