On cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships

Abstract Cyberbullying is an important social challenge that takes place over a technical substrate. Thus, it has attracted research interest across both computational and social science research communities. While the social science studies conducted via careful participant selection...

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Main Authors: Huang, Qianjia, Singh, Vivek K, Atrey, Pradeep K
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Media Laboratory
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Singapore 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/131402
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author Huang, Qianjia
Singh, Vivek K
Atrey, Pradeep K
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Media Laboratory
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Media Laboratory
Huang, Qianjia
Singh, Vivek K
Atrey, Pradeep K
author_sort Huang, Qianjia
collection MIT
description Abstract Cyberbullying is an important social challenge that takes place over a technical substrate. Thus, it has attracted research interest across both computational and social science research communities. While the social science studies conducted via careful participant selection have shown the effect of personality, social relationships, and psychological factors on cyberbullying, they are often limited in scale due to manual survey or ethnographic study components. Computational approaches on the other hand have defined multiple automated approaches for detecting cyberbullying at scale, and have largely focused only on the textual content of the messages exchanged. There are no existing efforts aimed at testing, validating, and potentially refining the findings from traditional bullying literature as obtained via surveys and ethnographic studies at scale over online environments. By analyzing the social relationship graph between users in an online social network and deriving features such as out-degree centrality and the number of common friends, we find that multiple social characteristics are statistically different between the cyberbullying and non-bullying groups, thus supporting many, but not all, of the results found in previous survey-based bullying studies. The results pave way for better understanding of the cyberbullying phenomena at scale.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1314022023-03-15T20:38:20Z On cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships Huang, Qianjia Singh, Vivek K Atrey, Pradeep K Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Media Laboratory Abstract Cyberbullying is an important social challenge that takes place over a technical substrate. Thus, it has attracted research interest across both computational and social science research communities. While the social science studies conducted via careful participant selection have shown the effect of personality, social relationships, and psychological factors on cyberbullying, they are often limited in scale due to manual survey or ethnographic study components. Computational approaches on the other hand have defined multiple automated approaches for detecting cyberbullying at scale, and have largely focused only on the textual content of the messages exchanged. There are no existing efforts aimed at testing, validating, and potentially refining the findings from traditional bullying literature as obtained via surveys and ethnographic studies at scale over online environments. By analyzing the social relationship graph between users in an online social network and deriving features such as out-degree centrality and the number of common friends, we find that multiple social characteristics are statistically different between the cyberbullying and non-bullying groups, thus supporting many, but not all, of the results found in previous survey-based bullying studies. The results pave way for better understanding of the cyberbullying phenomena at scale. 2021-09-20T17:16:55Z 2021-09-20T17:16:55Z 2018-08-14 2020-09-24T20:44:26Z Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/131402 en https://doi.org/10.1007/s42001-018-0026-9 Article is made available in accordance with the publisher's policy and may be subject to US copyright law. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use. Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. application/pdf Springer Singapore Springer Singapore
spellingShingle Huang, Qianjia
Singh, Vivek K
Atrey, Pradeep K
On cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships
title On cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships
title_full On cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships
title_fullStr On cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships
title_full_unstemmed On cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships
title_short On cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships
title_sort on cyberbullying incidents and underlying online social relationships
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/131402
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