“Relationships in the Digital Age: Self-Disclosure and Communication in Social Networking Sites”
Self-disclosure is the process of revealing personal, intimate information about oneself to others, and individuals getting to know each other. It is considered a key aspect of developing closeness and intimacy with others and maintaining relationships on social networking sites such as Facebook, Instagram and Tinder. Self-disclosure is closely related to social penetration theory, as it states that this process depends on the disclosure both in terms of depth, stages of penetration, and breadth as well as rewards and costs rationale.
Dr. Loreta Huber is a Professor of Inter-Cultural Communication & Translation at Vilnius University Kaunas Faculty. She has experience of over 29 years of teaching at universities and training institutions in Lithuania, United Kingdom, Israel and Germany, where she also held academic positions in the areas of Cross-cultural communication, migration, Audiovisual translation (AVT), Media accessibility, literary and gender studies. Her research interests are semiotics of culture, gender studies, Audiovisual translation, human centered AI, digital humanities and media accessibility. Dr. Loreta Huber is a keynote speaker at international congresses, guest editor of scientific journals, co-editor of RespectusPhilologicus, and an author of over 60 scholarly articles and books.
This event is sponsored by the UCF Center for Humanities and Digital Research (CHDR), the Department of English, and the Texts & Technology Ph.D. Program.
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