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Journal ArticleDOI

The Effect of Linkedin on Deception in Resumes

TLDR
Compared with traditional resumes, Linkedin resumes were less deceptive about the kinds of information that count most to employers, namely an applicant's prior work experience and responsibilities, but more deceptive about interests and hobbies.
Abstract
This study explores how Linkedin shapes patterns of deception in resumes. The general self-presentation goal to appear favorably to others motivates deception when one's true characteristics are inconsistent with their desired impression. Because Linkedin makes resume claims public, deception patterns should be altered relative to traditional resumes. Participants (n=119) in a between-subjects experiment created resumes in one of three resume settings: a traditional (offline) resume, private Linkedin profiles, or publicly available Linkedin profiles. Findings suggest that the public nature of Linkedin resume claims affected the kinds of deception used to create positive impressions, but did not affect the overall frequency of deception. Compared with traditional resumes, Linkedin resumes were less deceptive about the kinds of information that count most to employers, namely an applicant's prior work experience and responsibilities, but more deceptive about interests and hobbies. The results stand...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Deception detection for news: three types of fakes

TL;DR: Three types of fake news are discussed, each in contrast to genuine serious reporting, and their pros and cons as a corpus for text analytics and predictive modeling are weighed.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Self-Disclosure and Perceived Trustworthiness of Airbnb Host Profiles

TL;DR: This work uses a mixed-methods study to develop a categorization of the topics that hosts self-disclose in their profile descriptions, and shows that these topics differ depending on the type of guest engagement expected.
Journal ArticleDOI

LinkedIn and recruitment: how profiles differ across occupations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the elements of a LinkedIn profile that hiring professionals focus on most, and then examine LinkedIn profiles in terms of these identified elements across different industries, and find significant differences with respect to ten of the LinkedIn variables in how people presented themselves across the three groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-presentation and hiring recommendations in online communities

TL;DR: The results show that recruiters make inferences about job seekers' person-job fit and person-organisation fit on the basis of argument quality in specific self-presentation categories, which in turn predict recruiters' intentions to recommend job seekers for hiring.

Towards News Verification: Deception Detection Methods for News Discourse

TL;DR: This work analyzed rhetorical structures, discourse constituent parts and their coherence relations in deceptive and truthful news sample from NPR’s “Bluff the Listener” to uncover systematic language differences and inform the core methodology of the news verification system.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship

TL;DR: This publication contains reprint articles for which IEEE does not hold copyright and which are likely to be copyrighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computer-Mediated Communication Impersonal, Interpersonal, and Hyperpersonal Interaction

TL;DR: The authors reviewed the history of computer mediated communication and found that impersonal communication is sometimes advantageous, and strategies for the intentional depersonalization of media use are inferred, with implications for Group Decision Support Systems effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recommender systems

TL;DR: This special section includes descriptions of five recommender systems, which provide recommendations as inputs, which the system then aggregates and directs to appropriate recipients, and which combine evaluations with content analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reputation systems

TL;DR: Systems T he Internet offers vast new opportunities to interact with total strangers, but these interactions can be fun, informative, even profitable, but they also involve risk.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cues to deception

TL;DR: Results show that in some ways, liars are less forthcoming than truth tellers, and they tell less compelling tales, and their stories include fewer ordinary imperfections and unusual contents.
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Because Linkedin makes resume claims public, deception patterns should be altered relative to traditional resumes.