Graduate School of Sciences and Technology for Innovation, Tokushima University, Tokushima, Japan.
Akihabara Laboratory, CyberAgent, Inc., Tokyo, Japan.
J Community Psychol. 2021 Aug;49(6):1598-1616. doi: 10.1002/jcop.22528. Epub 2021 Feb 19.
This study clarified the advantages of virtual communities on non-victim experiences among lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, questioning, intersex, and asexual (LGBTQIA) individuals in Japan. A total of 3504 Pigg Party users, including 1390 LGBTQIA individuals, reported their experiences of victimization, perceived emotional support, and concealment of their gender/sexual identity in both physical and virtual communities. Japanese individuals with multiple minority statuses had more victim experiences than those with a single or without minority status. Furthermore, differences in victim experiences by gender/sexual minority status were lower in the virtual community than in physical communities. Similar tendencies were also confirmed on perceived emotional support and concealment. Virtual communities provided a more bias-free social resource to Japanese LGBTQIA individuals than physical communities.
这项研究阐明了虚拟社区对日本同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、疑问、间性和无性恋(LGBTQIA)个体非受害经历的优势。共有 3504 名 Pigg Party 用户,包括 1390 名 LGBTQIA 个体,报告了他们在物理社区和虚拟社区中遭受的伤害、感知到的情感支持以及对其性别/性身份的隐瞒。具有多种少数群体身份的日本个体比具有单一或没有少数群体身份的个体遭受更多的伤害经历。此外,虚拟社区中性别/性少数群体地位的差异比物理社区中的差异更小。在感知到的情感支持和隐瞒方面也证实了类似的趋势。虚拟社区为日本 LGBTQIA 个体提供了比物理社区更无偏见的社会资源。