Semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communities

People who engage in non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) often conceal their practices, which limits examination and understanding of their engagement. The goal of this research is to utilize data from public online social networks (namely, LiveJournal, a major blogging social networking site) to observ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: D Zinoviev, D Stefanescu, G Fireman, L Swenson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-04-01
Series:Digital Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2055207616642118
id doaj-21284ac7a90440ed9cd5aa48bb7284c1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-21284ac7a90440ed9cd5aa48bb7284c12020-11-25T03:03:15ZengSAGE PublishingDigital Health2055-20762016-04-01210.1177/2055207616642118Semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communitiesD Zinoviev0D Stefanescu1G Fireman2L Swenson3Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Suffolk University, Boston, USADepartment of Mathematics and Computer Science, Suffolk University, Boston, USADepartment of Psychology, Suffolk University, Boston, USADepartment of Psychology, Suffolk University, Boston, USAPeople who engage in non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) often conceal their practices, which limits examination and understanding of their engagement. The goal of this research is to utilize data from public online social networks (namely, LiveJournal, a major blogging social networking site) to observe the NSSI population in a naturally occurring setting. Specifically, the focus of this paper is the interests publicly declared by LiveJournal users. In the course of study, we collected the self-declared interests of 25,000 users who are members of or participate in 139 NSSI-related communities. We constructed a family of semantic networks of interests based on their similarity. The semantic networks are structured and contain several dense clusters—semantic domains—that include NSSI-specific interests (such as self-injury and razor ), references to music performers (such as evanescence ), and general daily life and creativity related interests (such as poetry and friendship ). Assuming users are genuine in their declarations, the clusters reveal distinct patterns of interest and may signal keys to NSSI.https://doi.org/10.1177/2055207616642118
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D Zinoviev
D Stefanescu
G Fireman
L Swenson
spellingShingle D Zinoviev
D Stefanescu
G Fireman
L Swenson
Semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communities
Digital Health
author_facet D Zinoviev
D Stefanescu
G Fireman
L Swenson
author_sort D Zinoviev
title Semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communities
title_short Semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communities
title_full Semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communities
title_fullStr Semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communities
title_full_unstemmed Semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communities
title_sort semantic networks of interests in online non-suicidal self-injury communities
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Digital Health
issn 2055-2076
publishDate 2016-04-01
description People who engage in non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) often conceal their practices, which limits examination and understanding of their engagement. The goal of this research is to utilize data from public online social networks (namely, LiveJournal, a major blogging social networking site) to observe the NSSI population in a naturally occurring setting. Specifically, the focus of this paper is the interests publicly declared by LiveJournal users. In the course of study, we collected the self-declared interests of 25,000 users who are members of or participate in 139 NSSI-related communities. We constructed a family of semantic networks of interests based on their similarity. The semantic networks are structured and contain several dense clusters—semantic domains—that include NSSI-specific interests (such as self-injury and razor ), references to music performers (such as evanescence ), and general daily life and creativity related interests (such as poetry and friendship ). Assuming users are genuine in their declarations, the clusters reveal distinct patterns of interest and may signal keys to NSSI.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2055207616642118
work_keys_str_mv AT dzinoviev semanticnetworksofinterestsinonlinenonsuicidalselfinjurycommunities
AT dstefanescu semanticnetworksofinterestsinonlinenonsuicidalselfinjurycommunities
AT gfireman semanticnetworksofinterestsinonlinenonsuicidalselfinjurycommunities
AT lswenson semanticnetworksofinterestsinonlinenonsuicidalselfinjurycommunities
_version_ 1724686770433425408