articleCyberPsychology & BehaviorJun 1, 2004Closed access

The Online Disinhibition Effect

Rider University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

While online, some people self-disclose or act out more frequently or intensely than they would in person. This article explores six factors that interact with each other in creating this online disinhibition effect: dissociative anonymity, invisibility, asynchronicity, solipsistic introjection, dissociative imagination, and minimization of authority. Personality variables also will influence the extent of this disinhibition. Rather than thinking of disinhibition as the revealing of an underlying "true self," we can conceptualize it as a shift to a constellation within self-structure, involving clusters of affect and cognition that differ from the in-person constellation.

Citation impact

3,967
total citations
FWCI
14.35
Percentile
100%
References
15
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Disinhibition
  • Psychology
  • Affect (linguistics)
  • Social psychology
  • Personality
  • Dissociative
  • Anonymity
  • Invisibility
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