SIJul 4, 2024
Leveraging Machine Learning to Identify Gendered Stereotypes and Body Image Concerns on Diet and Fitness Online ForumsMinh Duc Chu, Cinthia Sánchez, Zihao He et al.
The pervasive expectations about ideal body types in Western society can lead to body image concerns, dissatisfaction, and in extreme cases, eating disorders and other psychopathologies related to body image. While previous research has focused on online pro-anorexia communities glorifying the "thin ideal," less attention has been given to the broader spectrum of body image concerns or how emerging disorders like muscle dysmorphia ("bigorexia") present on online platforms. To address this gap, we analyze 46 Reddit forums related to diet, fitness, and mental health. We map these communities along gender and body ideal dimensions, revealing distinct patterns of emotional expression and community support. Feminine-oriented communities, especially those endorsing the thin ideal, express higher levels of negative emotions and receive caring comments in response. In contrast, muscular ideal communities display less negativity, regardless of gender orientation, but receive aggressive compliments in response, marked by admiration and toxicity. Mental health discussions align more with thin ideal, feminine-leaning spaces. By uncovering these gendered emotional dynamics, our findings can inform the development of moderation strategies that foster supportive interactions while reducing exposure to harmful content.
49.5SIMar 23
Tied In on TikTok: Tie Strength and Emotional Dynamics in Algorithmic CommunitiesCharles Bickham, Minh Duc Chu, Arianna Yuan et al.
Whether genuine communities can form on algorithmically-driven short-form video platforms like TikTok remains an open question, given that user interactions are often brief, dispersed, and difficult to trace. Building on theories of tie strength and online community formation, we examine whether eating disorder (ED) discourse on TikTok exhibits behavioral and emotional signatures of strong ties, including more frequent, reciprocal, and affectively intense interactions. In this paper, we analyze 43,040 ED-related TikTok videos and over 560,000 comments, alongside a Non-ED comparison dataset. We find that at the user-pair level, greater interaction frequency is associated with increasingly positive emotional expression, a pattern that is amplified in ED-related conversations. This trend is also reflected linguistically, with pairs that interact more frequently exhibiting more of a positive tone. At the same time, how a relationship starts matters: pairs that begin with positive exchanges usually stay mostly positive as they continue interacting, while pairs that begin negatively may add some positive exchanges over time but rarely become mostly positive. To contextualize these dynamics, we classify ED videos into three content types (Pro-Recovery, Pro-ED, and ED Experiences) and find that each exhibits distinct emotional interaction patterns. These findings suggest that dense, emotionally structured relationships can emerge within ED discourse on TikTok. More broadly, our work provides one of the first empirical demonstrations of how community-like relational dynamics form and persist on algorithmically driven short-form video platforms.