An Investigation on the Portrayal of Blue Whale Challenge on YouTube and Twitter

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Abstract

Social media has created opportunities for children to gather social support online (Blackwell et al., 2016; Gonzales, 2017; Jackson, Bailey, & Foucault Welles, 2018; Khasawneh, Rogers, Bertrand, Madathil, & Gramopadhye, 2019; Ponathil, Agnisarman, Khasawneh, Narasimha, & Madathil, 2017). However, social media also has the potential to expose children and adolescents to undesirable behaviors. Research showed that social media can be used to harass, discriminate (Fritz & Gonzales, 2018), dox (Wood, Rose, & Thompson, 2018), and socially disenfranchise children (Page, Wisniewski, Knijnenburg, & Namara, 2018). Other research proposes that social media use might be correlated to the significant increase in suicide rates and depressive symptoms among children and adolescents in the past ten years (Mitchell, Wells, Priebe, & Ybarra, 2014). Evidence based research suggests that suicidal and unwanted behaviors can be promulgated through social contagion effects, which model, normalize, and reinforce self-harming behavior (Hilton, 2017). These harmful behaviors and social contagion effects may occur more frequently through repetitive exposure and modelling via social media, especially when such content goes “viral” (Hilton, 2017).

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APA

Khasawneh, A. M., Chalil Madathil, K., Dixon, E., Wisniewski, P., Zinzow, H., & Roth, R. (2019). An Investigation on the Portrayal of Blue Whale Challenge on YouTube and Twitter. In Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society (Vol. 63, pp. 887–888). SAGE Publications Inc. https://doi.org/10.1177/1071181319631179

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