Digital Identity Cues

digital virtue signaling, digital signifying, online signals (avatars, slang, affiliations) that communicate group membership

The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion

Jonathan Haidt’s The Righteous Mind explores the psychological bases of moral reasoning, arguing that people’s moral judgments are driven more by intuitive, emotional processes than by deliberate reasoning, and that ideological divisions stem from differences in moral foundations. He proposes that understanding moral psychology can help explain political and cultural polarization.

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The Psychology of the Internet

Patricia Wallace’s The Psychology of the Internet provides a comprehensive research‑based overview of how online environments shape human behavior, emotions, and social interaction across contexts such as impression formation, group dynamics, aggression, attraction, altruism, privacy, gaming, development, and gender. The book integrates classic and contemporary psychological research to explain why people behave differently online and how those behaviors both reflect and inform social life on the Internet.

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Curation: A Theoretical Treatment

Davis proposes a theoretical framework for digital curation, arguing that it is a central mechanism of sociality in the information‑rich online environment. She distinguishes between productive curation (selecting and sharing content) and consumptive curation (sorting and attending to information), showing how these practices are shaped by social networks and technological design.

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