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Facebook and Instagram emotions identification automatically generated autobiography

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Facebook and Instagram emotions identification automatically generated autobiography ( facebook-and-instagram-emotions-identification-automatically )

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Deborah Klink (s1811150), Bachelor thesis 11 validity with .95 for the Positive Affect Scale and .91 for the Negative Affect scale for in-the- moment measures with a two-factor model (Watson et al., 1988). In this study, Cronbach’s alpha was .808 and .548 for the Positive Affect Scale for the pre-test and post-test respectively. For the Negative Affect Scale, the Cronbach’s Alpha were .904 and .887 for the pre-test and post-test respectively. These measures correspond to excellent and good internal reliability respectively (George & Mallery, 1999). Identity scale. In order to measure the extent to which individuals identify with their automatically generated autobiography, two single-item measures of identification were used. The first one was the single-item measure of social identification by Postmes, Haslam, and Jans (2013). The original item (“I identify with my group or category.”) was reworded to fit the purpose of the study (“I identify with the generated autobiography.”). This item is thought to measure especially the inner feelings of identification and the extent to which individuals found their current identity in their automatically generated autobiography. The item is measured on a 7-point scale with 1 = “fully disagree” to 7 = “fully agree”, with higher scores indicating a higher social identification (Postmes et al., 2013). The normative score for the single-item measure of social identification is 3.5 (Postmes et al., 2013). Additionally, an item from the dimension Autonomy from the Needs-Satisfactions questionnaire was used (Sheldon, Elliot, Kim, & Kasser, 2001). The original scale measures need-satisfactions in ten dimensions. The item used in this study is derived from the dimension Autonomy, which is defined as “feeling like you are the cause of your own actions rather than feeling that external forces or pressures are the cause of your actions” (Sheldon et al., 2001, p. 339). Therefore, it is relevant to the current study because it measures the extent to which an individual can be him or herself in contrast to succumbing to external pressures. Out of the three items which fall under the dimension of Autonomy, only the last one was selected for this study due to its high relevance. The original item (“During the event I felt that my choices expressed my true self.”) was altered to fit the setting of the study (“While reviewing the automatically generated autobiography, I felt that it expressed my true self.”). This item is thought to measure specifically the extent to which the posts are representative of the individual’s current identity and, thus, add to and intertwine with the single-item measure of social identification. Furthermore, the item was measured using a 7-point scale with 1 = “fully disagree” to 7 = “fully agree”, with higher scores indicating a higher identification. The normative score for the Autonomy scale of the Needs-Satisfaction questionnaire is 3.98 (Sheldon et al., 2001).

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