Duckface Selfie: What It Really Means

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Some say snapping selfies are a sign of narcissism. While researchers have found correlations between selfies and self-absorption, according to some recent research, certain types of selfies are also connected to other personality traits.

A November 2015 study in Computers in Human Behavior found that “duckface” – the pouty-lipped expression worn in many a selfie  correlates positively with neuroticism. In the “Big Five” system of personality categorization, neuroticism is one of the five personality traits considered universal across cultures, along with openness to new experience, agreeability, conscientiousness and extraversion. This perspective describes neurotic people as anxious, pessimistic, insecure and emotionally unstable.

The researchers behind the study found that people who make a duckface in their selfies are likely to not only beneurotic, but also be perceived as neurotic by those who look at their pictures.

 A correlation was also found between neuroticism and selfie-editing in Photoshop. It’s possible that neurotic individuals worry more about how they look, so they spend more time fixing their imperfections before posting pictures. People perceived as being neurotic were also likelier to only show part of their face in their selfies, further suggesting that these people tend to be insecure about their appearance.

That raises the question, “Why even take selfies in the first place if you’re not proud of how you look?”

 One explanation is that selfies allow us to represent ourselves however we like, in ways that more traditional photos do not. We can’t carefully choose our poses and facial expressions in candid photos taken by otherpeople, nor can we easily dress them up with Instagram filters and Photoshop tricks.  Self-improvement experts say that selfies,including duckface, contain unique“cues” not seen in other kinds of photos and that these cues may represent new ways of expressing one’s personality that didn’t exist prior to the advent of the selfie.

Duckface, then, might be more than just a playful pose some people pull in photos. For some, it might be a defense mechanism, a method of self-expression or a hint of angst seething below the surface. It’s a trend that’s received a lot of flak for being ugly or silly, but perhaps that vitriol is an intuitive response to the deeper meaning of duckface: that it’s a prettily-posed mask hiding unsettling emotions.

Na scientists talk am o…not MDB lol.

3 Comments
  1. Lionheart says

    It’s good you let them know.

  2. Tosin says

    Lol that means 99.8% of ladies are neurotic… cos we’ve all done the duck face expression at one time or the other. Even some men do pout sef lol

  3. Mannyxander says

    I concur…

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