Abstract

During the COVID-19 emergency, people must face the invisible threat of uncertain death and comply with social distancing and other related protective measures. But social networking sites (SNSs) like WeChat have emerged as alternative contexts where people can maintain self and obtain gratification, despite the disclosure of self to others often being a challenging issue. To examine the effect of personality factors on people's self-disclosure on SNSs, we develop a model based on the time perspective theory and the socioemotional selectivity theory. We suggest that people's narcissism traits and two types of time perspective (i.e. future and present-hedonistic) have positive effects on their self-disclosure. In addition, we propose that virtual presence and hedonic gratification mediate the effects of both future time perspective and present-hedonistic time perspective. We obtain a sample of 516 WeChat users in China and take ex-ante and post-hoc measures to deal with common method variance. By means of partial least squares-structural equation modelling (PLS-SEM) methods, we validate both our measurement model and the structural model, so we confirm all the hypothesized causal paths in the proposed model. Our study broadens the boundaries of the time perspective theory and the socioemotional selectivity theory, and offers new insights for addressing some of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic causes deaths and in-person social distancing, as well as damages business (Pejic-Bach, 2020)

  • We discuss three research questions together: (1) Do individual narcissism traits influence social networking sites (SNSs) users’ self-disclosure in the COVID-19 emergency? (2) Do Time perspectives (TPs) influence SNS users’ self-disclosure? (3) If so, are the effects of TPs mediated by relevant aspects of users’ immersive experiences and motivations on SNSs? By answering these questions, this paper aims to enrich our current understanding of the outcomes of narcissism traits, time perspective, immersive experi­ ences, and user motivation on online disclosure during the COVID-19 emergency

  • We applied partial least squares-structural equation modelling (PLSSEM, or PLS) methods to estimate the relationships between the latent constructs in our research model and the multi-item scales we had used to measure them, and to test the causal relationships between the constructs

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic causes deaths and in-person social distancing, as well as damages business (Pejic-Bach, 2020). More recent studies mainly focused on the notable effects of narcissism traits on online behavior within the clinical as well as non-clinical domains. These studies have examined the effects of narcissism traits on self-disclosure Liu, Ang, & Lwin, 2016), social interactions (Ksinan & Vazsonyi, 2016), self-presentation (Huang & Liu, 2020), and selfie-posting (Shane-Simp­ son et al, 2020). How­ ever, we still know little about the effects of narcissism traits on general SNS users’ self-disclosure in emergency contexts such as the COVID-19 pandemic

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