The aspects of social media and its relationship with the looking-glass self present a whole range of effects on social media users. Aiken notes that individuals, and particularly teenagers, who are increasingly involved in updating their online personas, risk damaging the development of their real-world self. She also notes that this effect may be even greater among users who display all different sorts of "cyber selves" among different platforms with different purposes, such as between X (previously
Twitter), Instagram, and LinkedIn. The negative effects of the looking-glass self can be harmful to the people's mentality. According to Zsolt Unoka and Gabriella Vizin's,
To See In a Mirror Dimly. The Looking-Glass is Self-Shaming in Borderline Personality Disorder, shame is a large factor in the development of
Borderline Personality Disorder. The feeling of shame and insufficient self-worth comes from traumatic experiences such as abuse, neglect, abandonment, shaming family situations, and harsh upbringing. In a world of social media, seeking attention and approval from others is how adolescents determine their self-worth. They create an image of themselves they think others will approve of. This is in close relation to the concept of the looking glass self. Adolescents experience anxiety and depression based on a low opinion of self-worth, and they base this self-worth on other's opinions of them.
Family study In another study in the
Journal of Family Psychology in 1998, researchers Cook and Douglas measured the validity of the looking glass self and
symbolic interaction in the context of familial relationships. The study analyzed the accuracy of a college student's and an adolescent's perceptions of how they are perceived by their parents, surveying mothers, fathers, college students, and adolescents.
Social media study In 2015, Emojis and memes serve as visual tools that compensate for the lack of nonverbal cues in text-based digital communication. These elements convey emotional tone, attitude, and vocal nuance that are otherwise difficult to express through written text alone. The same study also reported survey results from 460 respondents, revealing that 30.6% of participants used emojis specifically to influence how they are perceived by others online. in the
International Journal of Behavioral Development in 2018, researchers investigated self-other agreement, which refers to the similarity between adolescents' perception of their own personality and their parents' perception. Building on the looking-glass self, researchers examined whether self-other agreement in personality between adolescents and their parents promoted self-esteem development from adolescence to adulthood. The researchers specifically examined whether the effect of self-other agreement prevailed after controlling for personality traits and whether the impact differed between boys and girls. It was hypothesized that when there is high agreement, adolescents may form a clearer and more confident self-view, thereby supporting positive development. == Applications ==