Your Avatar Changes You
Yee & Bailenson (2007) discovered that our virtual avatars change our real behavior. Participants given taller avatars negotiated more aggressively—not just in VR, but in subsequent face-to-face interactions. Those with attractive avatars disclosed more personal information and stood closer to others. Your digital mask becomes your actual face.
Select an avatar and experience how it influences your choices in social scenarios
Participants given taller avatars negotiated more aggressively and accepted unfair offers less often. Crucially, this effect persisted in face-to-face interactions AFTER leaving VR.
Users with attractive avatars walked closer to virtual others and disclosed more personal information—behaviors that carried over to real interactions.
Analysis of 13.6 million chat messages found players' avatar characteristics influenced their communication—more aggressive characters typed more toxic messages.
Participants embodying superheroes in VR showed more helping behavior afterward. The virtual power fantasy translated to real-world altruism.
Young participants given elderly avatars showed reduced implicit bias against older people—embodiment created empathy.
Women assigned sexualized avatars reported more body image thoughts—they internalized the objectifying representation.
The Proteus Effect works through self-perception theory: we infer our attitudes by observing our own behavior. When you embody a tall, powerful avatar, your brain interprets this as "I must be confident"—and you become more confident. Combined with deindividuation (anonymity reducing inhibition), avatars unlock hidden aspects of personality.
Implications: VR therapy for confidence issues, empathy training via avatar swapping, awareness of how gaming avatars shape behavior. The mask doesn't hide—it reveals and reinforces.