Visual Identity and the Psychology of Buying in the Digital Age
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.71082/s5ef9142Keywords:
Consumer Psychology, Digital identity, Self-perception, Social Media marketing, Symbolic Consumption, Visual Content.Abstract
In the digital age, consumer behavior is increasingly shaped by symbolic, emotional, and identity-driven mechanisms rather than traditional utilitarian logic. This study explores how visual content, self-perception, and social media dynamics intersect to influence consumer decision-making in online environments. Drawing from Self-Concept Theory, Social Comparison Theory, and Visual Rhetoric Theory, the research adopts a qualitative, theory-informed methodology to analyze 100 curated visual media posts from platforms such as Instagram and TikTok. Using thematic analysis, visual semiotics, and document analysis, the study identifies four key psychological patterns: aspirational identity alignment, emotional resonance and aesthetic immersion, visualized social comparison, and authenticity-driven self-validation. Findings reveal that consumers engage with brand imagery not merely for functional evaluation, but as a means of identity expression, emotional fulfillment, and social positioning. The study proposes an integrative conceptual framework that models these interactions within a recursive feedback loop of digital consumer identity. By emphasizing the affective and interpretive nature of visual consumption, this research offers new insights for marketers, designers, and scholars seeking to understand and ethically engage contemporary consumers in the symbolic economy of social media.





