Publication | Closed Access
Privacy and Self‐Disclosure in Social Relationships
396
Citations
24
References
1977
Year
Personality FunctioningSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceInformation PrivacyCommunicationSocial SciencesPsychologySocial RelationshipsPrivacy ManagementSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesCommunication EffectsPrivacy IssueData PrivacySocial InteractionApplied Social PsychologyPrivacy AnonymityPrivacy ConcernBoundary AdjustmentInterpersonal CommunicationBoundary RegulationInterpersonal RelationshipsRelational CommunicationArts
Privacy is viewed as a process of boundary regulation, controlling how much (or how little) contact an individual maintains with others. Self‐disclosure involves the verbal transmission of information. Adjustment of self‐disclosure outputs and inputs is boundary regulation; the extent of control one maintains over this exchange of information contributes to the amount of privacy one has in a social relationship. Regulation of interpersonal boundaries affects the kinds of relationships we maintain with others (as in friendships and power relationships). There also are implications for personality functioning. Reconceptualizing self‐disclosure as a form of boundary adjustment in the maintenance of privacy may provide a useful framework for integrating the self‐disclosure literature.
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