When the Psyche and the 'Net Collide: Sources of and potential methods for preventing Bad Behavior Online
Author(s)
Wedeman, Sara; Clark, David D
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Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
With the emergence of social networking has come a range of harmful and malicious behaviors online, including disinformation, cyberbullying, and sextortion among others. These behaviors arise from a number of causes, including the incentives of the providers of the social networking platforms and the technical affordances of those platforms, which in some cases facilitate these abuses. This report sheds light on the causes and possible mitigations of these behaviors through the lens of behavioral psychology. Results from psychological research suggest that these abuses play on specific human attributes. To design effective mitigations, it is crucial that these human attributes be understood. This report draws on literature from psychology research to outline the important human behavioral attributes, relates these to some of the important affordances found in social networking applications, and suggests possible approaches that can damp the bad behavior we observe online.
Description
This is the final report for an NSF-sponsored study of psychology literature related to the online experience, and the drivers and possible mitigations of bad behavior online.
Date issued
2026-01-29Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence LaboratoryKeywords
Psychology, Internet, Cyberbully, Fraud, Affordance, BBOL