Subrahmanyam Kaveri, Smahel David, Greenfield Patricia
Department of Child and Family Studies, California State University, Los Angeles, CA 90032-8190, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2006 May;42(3):395-406. doi: 10.1037/0012-1649.42.3.395.
The authors examined the online construction of identity and sexuality in a large sample of conversations from monitored and unmonitored teen chat rooms. More than half of the 583 participants (identified by a distinct screen name) communicated identity information, most frequently gender. In this way, participants compensated for the text-based chat environment by providing information about themselves that would be visible and obvious in face-to-face communication. Sexual themes constituted 5% of all utterances (1 sexual comment per minute); bad or obscene language constituted 3% of the sample (1 obscenity every 2 minutes). Participants who self-identified as female produced more implicit sexual communication, participants who self-identified as male produced more explicit sexual communication. The protected environment of monitored chat (hosts who enforce basic behavioral rules) contained an environment with less explicit sexuality and fewer obscenities than the freer environment of unmonitored chat. These differences were attributable both to the monitoring process itself and to the differing populations attracted to each type of chat room (monitored: more participants self-identified as younger and female; unmonitored: more participants self-identified as older and male).
作者们研究了在大量来自受监控和不受监控的青少年聊天室的对话样本中身份认同和性取向的网络构建情况。583名参与者(通过独特的网名识别)中超过一半交流了身份信息,最常见的是性别。通过这种方式,参与者通过提供在面对面交流中会显而易见的自身信息,来弥补基于文本的聊天环境的不足。性主题占所有话语的5%(每分钟1条性评论);不良或淫秽语言占样本的3%(每2分钟1条淫秽内容)。自我认定为女性的参与者产生了更多隐含的性交流,自我认定为男性的参与者产生了更多明确的性交流。受监控聊天的受保护环境(有执行基本行为规则的管理员)比起不受监控聊天的更自由环境,含有更少明确的性内容和更少的淫秽内容。这些差异既归因于监控过程本身,也归因于被每种类型聊天室吸引的不同人群(受监控的:更多参与者自我认定为年龄较小和女性;不受监控的:更多参与者自我认定为年龄较大和男性)。