TY - GEN
T1 - Communal quirks and circlejerks : a taxonomy of processes contributing to insularity in online communities
AU - Allison, Kimberley
AU - Bussey, Kay
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - ![CDATA[Online communication offers the potential for bridging connections, exposing users to new views and experiences by fostering socially heterogenous communities. However, in the absence of deliberate attempts to promote diversity, communities may tend towards insularity: a state where members and content are similar or homogenous, and where deviation from these norms is discouraged. This paper presents a taxonomy of processes contributing to insularity, synthesizing findings from a broader longitudinal interview study on engagement with online communities over time with previous literature. Using thematic analysis, sixteen processes were identified which were associated with four broad stages: formation (selective connections, network homophily, shared interests, audience segmentation); propagation (circlejerking, upholding community standards, avoiding conflict, tailoring content); reaction (individual avoidance, collective reaction, mocking deviance, derogating outsiders); and perpetuation (modelling, prior feedback, echo chambers, gatekeeping). These findings highlight the need to consider more diverse mechanisms by which communities become insular, and the role that platform features play in facilitating these processes.]]
AB - ![CDATA[Online communication offers the potential for bridging connections, exposing users to new views and experiences by fostering socially heterogenous communities. However, in the absence of deliberate attempts to promote diversity, communities may tend towards insularity: a state where members and content are similar or homogenous, and where deviation from these norms is discouraged. This paper presents a taxonomy of processes contributing to insularity, synthesizing findings from a broader longitudinal interview study on engagement with online communities over time with previous literature. Using thematic analysis, sixteen processes were identified which were associated with four broad stages: formation (selective connections, network homophily, shared interests, audience segmentation); propagation (circlejerking, upholding community standards, avoiding conflict, tailoring content); reaction (individual avoidance, collective reaction, mocking deviance, derogating outsiders); and perpetuation (modelling, prior feedback, echo chambers, gatekeeping). These findings highlight the need to consider more diverse mechanisms by which communities become insular, and the role that platform features play in facilitating these processes.]]
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:67074
UR - https://ojs.aaai.org//index.php/ICWSM/issue/view/262
M3 - Conference Paper
SN - 9781577358237
SP - 12
EP - 23
BT - Proceedings of the 14th International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM 2020), June 8 - 11, 2019, Virtual
PB - AAAI Press
T2 - International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media
Y2 - 8 June 2020
ER -