| Literature DB >> 31304296 |
Jonathan Auerbach1, Kevin Li1, Desmond Upton Patton1, Owen Rambow1, William Frey1.
Abstract
Recent studies suggest social media shapes the transmission of firearm violence in high-poverty, urban neighborhoods. However, the exact pathways by which content on social media becomes threatening has not been studied. We consider a dataset of tweets by gang-involved Chicago youth that are coded for expressions of aggression and/or loss. Using a permutation test and mixed-effects log linear regression, we find that aggression and loss tweets do not occur randomly, and furthermore that in a 2-day window after loss expressions we find an increase in aggressive tweets. We discuss implications for intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Social sciences; Society; Sociology
Year: 2018 PMID: 31304296 PMCID: PMC6550197 DOI: 10.1038/s41746-018-0020-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Digit Med ISSN: 2398-6352
Permutation test results
| Lagging label | Leading label | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Aggression | Loss | Other | |
| Aggression | 0 | 0.217 | 1 |
| Loss | 0.995 | 0 | 0.345 |
| Other | 0.984 | 1 | 0.03 |
Fig. 1Confidence intervals of coefficient estimates