dating apps
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2022 ◽  
Vol 6 (GROUP) ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Douglas Zytko ◽  
Nicholas Mullins ◽  
Shelnesha Taylor ◽  
Richard H. Holler

Use and design of dating apps has evolved in recent years to accommodate other interaction goals beyond dating, prompting some researchers to now refer to these apps as people-nearby applications (PNAs). With this expansion of use comes increased potential for misinterpretation of users' goals for meeting face-to-face, which can pose risks to user safety particularly when disparities in sexual expectations occur. We present a survey study (n=132) with users of several PNAs and with various motivations for PNA-use to understand how interaction goals are disclosed and detected. The study finds such practices to be far from consistent, with some appearing highly susceptible to misinterpretation such as purposely delaying self-presentation of interaction goals until meeting face-to-face, and implying sexual expectations through vague references to "fun." We conclude by suggesting a modified version of the "swiping" feature in PNAs to facilitate consistent and overt self-presentation of interaction goals in ways that accommodate user tendencies discovered in the study.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Hecht ◽  
Maria Zlotorzynska ◽  
Travis H. Sanchez ◽  
Dan Wohlfeiler

AbstractMen who have sex with men (MSM) frequently meet sex partners through dating apps. Research has demonstrated an association between app use and greater number of sex partners and STIs, but dating apps also pose an opportunity for intervention. By advocating for sexual health features on dating apps, Building Healthy Online Communities (BHOC) aims to increase communication about sexual health among app users. In partnership with Emory University, BHOC added questions to an annual survey of MSM. The questions assessed awareness and uptake of profile fields and sexual health features on the dating apps. Among survey participants, 67% (6737/10,129) reported using dating apps to meet a partner in the past year. Among this group, 77% (4993/6525) reported awareness of sexual health features. 61% of app users (2866/4721) who were aware of them reported using one or more sexual health features. BHOC continues to advocate for increased uptake of these features.


2022 ◽  
pp. 174997552110515
Author(s):  
Carolina Bandinelli ◽  
Alessandro Gandini

Dating apps promise a ‘digital fix’ to the ‘messy’ matter of love by means of datafication and algorithmic matching, realising a platformisation of romance commonly understood through notions of a market’s rationality and efficiency. Reflecting on the findings of a small-scale qualitative research on the use of dating apps among young adults in London, we problematise this view and argue that the specific form of marketisation articulated by dating apps is entrepreneurial in kind, whereby individuals act as brands facing the structural uncertainty of interacting with ‘quasi-strangers’. In so doing, we argue, dating app users enact a Luhmanian notion of interpersonal trust, built on the assessment of the risk of interacting with unfamiliar others that is typical of digitally mediated contexts dominated by reputational logics. From a sociocultural perspective, dating apps emerge as sociotechnical apparatuses that remediate the demand to rationally choose a partner while at the same time reproducing the (im)possibility of doing so. In this respect, far from offering a new form of efficiency, they (re)produce the ontological uncertainty (Illouz, 2019) that characterises lovers as entrepreneurs.


2022 ◽  
pp. 820-839
Author(s):  
Marianna Coppola

The diffusion of new media, of online communication, and the increasingly evident overlap between online and offline environments generates a specific question for scientific research on how these contents can represent an opportunity for “emancipation” and at the same time new areas in which can experience processes of exclusion, in particular for the LGBT community. In this sense, social media offers transgender people a wide range of tools and applications to create new knowledge, interact with other people, create new meeting opportunities, or trace new relationships and/or new emotional and sexual experiences. This research work aims to investigate the psychological, relational, and social aspects of transgender people who use social media and dating apps as communication spaces and relational environments in order to outline the peculiar aspects of media consumption, regulatory access and processes of stigmatization, and social discriminations by the web.


2022 ◽  
pp. 1651-1670
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Mazur

Although research indicates that almost all emerging adults in the U.S. use the internet, little is known about the online dating experiences of persons with disabilities. Particularly in developed countries, online dating currently accounts for a substantial proportion of the initiation of romantic relationships and promises numerous advantages for persons with disabilities. Online dating includes a way to escape disability stigma, at least initially, access to a wide network of potential partners, and a convenient, private, and efficient method of meeting them. Online daters can be strategic in how they present both themselves and their disabilities, the manner in which they communicate with potential partners, and whether they join a large, popular dating site or a specialized disability-oriented one. The chapter discusses how the nine-step process of online dating might differ for or challenge emerging adults with various types of disabilities, sharing relevant research and media examples when available. The implications of popular mobile dating apps are also considered.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chrysovalantis Stafylis ◽  
Gabriella Vavala ◽  
Qiao Qang ◽  
Bethany McLeman ◽  
Shea M Lemley ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Social media sites, dating applications (apps), and informational search sites have been used to reach individuals put at-risk for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infection. However, it is not clear which type of site is the most efficient in promoting home HIV self-testing, given that the users of various platforms may have different characteristics that impact their readiness for HIV testing. OBJECTIVE Compare the relative effectiveness of three web-based platform types: social media sites, dating apps, and informational search sites in promoting HIV self-testing among minority men who have sex with men (MSM) put at increased risk of HIV infection. In addition, we assessed differences in characteristics between participants who engaged and did not engage in HIV testing. METHODS Culturally appropriate advertisements were placed on popular sites of three different platforms: social media (Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter), dating apps (Grindr, Jack’d, and Hornet), and informational search sites (Google, Yahoo, and Bing). Advertisements targeted young (18-30 years old) and minority (Black and/or Latinx) MSM at risk of HIV exposure. Recruitment occurred in 3 waves, with each wave running advertisements on 1 site on each platform type over the same period. Participants completed a baseline survey assessing sexual or injection use behavior, substance use including alcohol, psychological readiness to test, attitudes toward HIV testing and treatment, and HIV-related stigma. Participants received an electronic code to order a free home-based HIV self-test kit. Follow-up assessments were conducted to assess HIV self-test kit use and uptake of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) at 14- and 60-days post enrollment. RESULTS In all, 271 participants were enrolled. Two-hundred and fifty-four participants were included in the final analysis. Among those 254, 177 (69.7%) ordered a home HIV self-test kit. Most of the self-test kits were ordered by participants enrolled from dating apps. Due to waves with low enrollment, between wave statistical comparisons were not feasible. Within wave comparison showed that Jack’d showed higher order rates (3.29 kits/day), compared to Instagram (0.34 kits/day), and Bing (0 kits/day). There was no association between self-test kit ordering and HIV-related stigma, perceptions about HIV testing and treatment, or mistrust of medical organizations. CONCLUSIONS Our findings show that use of popular dating apps might be an efficient way to promote HIV self-testing. CLINICALTRIAL This study was reviewed and approved by the University of California, Los Angeles, Institutional Review Board (IRB# 18-001580). The study was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04155502) and on International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/20417. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT RR2-10.2196/20417


2021 ◽  
pp. 279-294
Author(s):  
Marcin Kowalczyk

The paper presents findings regarding AI and Machine Learning and how “thinking machines” differ from human beings? In the next part the paper presents the issue of AI and Machine Learning’s impact on day-to-day activities in the following areas: 1. Microtargetting and psychometrics – with the examples from the business and politics; 2. Surveillance systems, biometric identification, COVID 19 tracing apps etc. – the issue of privacy in the digital era; 3. The question of choice optimization (AI-driven Web browsers and dating apps, chatbots and virtual assistants etc.); whether free will still exist in the AI supported on-line environment? The article is summed up with conclusions.


2021 ◽  
pp. 026540752110557
Author(s):  
Audrey Halversen ◽  
Jesse King ◽  
Lauren Silva

Dating apps are an increasingly common element of modern dating, yet little research describes users’ experiences rejecting potential partners through these apps. This study examines how female Bumble users reject potential partners online in relation to self-disclosure, perceived partner disclosure, pre-rejection stress, and app usage. To investigate these issues, we conducted an online survey of 419 female Bumble users who had recently rejected someone through the app. Results revealed that women on Bumble employ ghosting strategies far more often than confrontational rejection and suggest that the degree to which women self-disclose, perceive a partner’s self-disclosure, and experience pre-rejection stress may impact their rejection strategies. This study informs the hyperpersonal model by demonstrating that reciprocal disclosure may characterize online dating interactions—even in relationships that fail to reach the face-to-face stage. However, results also broach the possibility of communication burnout in online dating, in which some users may lessen self-disclosure after extensive app usage.


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