Psychological Theories about Media & Tech

It’s Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens

danah boyd uses more than a decade of fieldwork and interviews to show that teenagers’ use of social media is nuanced and purposeful, shaped by social needs for identity, community, privacy, and expression. She argues that many adult fears — about addiction, privacy loss, danger, and bullying — are exaggerated or misunderstood and that teens’ networked lives reflect adaptive social behavior, not pathology.

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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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On the Dangers of Stochastic Parrots: Can Language Models Be Too Big? 🦜

Bender and colleagues critique the trend toward larger and larger large language models (LLMs), arguing that scaling up these models amplifies serious harms—environmental, ethical, and social—without solving core problems of linguistic understanding or accountability. They call for more responsible research practices, including careful dataset curation, evaluation of societal impact, AI Ethics, and consideration of alternatives to ever‑larger models.

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Triangulating the Self: Identity Processes in a Connected Era

Davis examines how individuals negotiate identity in a networked era marked by digital social technologies, highlighting the challenge of maintaining a coherent balance between idealized and authentic self‑presentations. She identifies conditions such as the fluidity between digital and physical contexts, expectations of accuracy, and overlapping social networks that shape contemporary identity processes.

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Emotional consequences and attention rewards: the social effects of ratings on Reddit

Davis and Graham analyze how binary rating features (upvotes/downvotes) on Reddit influence users’ emotional expression and engagement, finding that upvotes tend to predict positive sentiment while downvotes predict negative emotion, yet downvoted content often generates higher engagement. The study frames ratings as affordances that function as symbolic markers of community norms, impacting both affect and attention patterns.

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Twitter and Teargas: The Power and Fragility of Networked Protest

Twitter and Tear Gas analyzes how digital technologies and social media have transformed protest movements, giving activists unprecedented ability to mobilize large numbers quickly while also exposing critical weaknesses in sustaining long‑term organization and strategy. Tufekci argues that networked online movements possess powerful strengths but are fragile in the face of institutional counter‑measures and lack the deeper capacities of traditional movements.

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