34 research outputs found
He votes or she votes? Female and male discursive strategies in Twitter political hashtags
In this paper, we conduct a study about differences between female and
male discursive strategies when posting in the microblogging service
Twitter, with a particular focus on the hashtag designation process
during political debate. The fact that men and women use language in
distinct ways, reverberating practices linked to their expected roles in
the social groups, is a linguistic phenomenon known to happen in
several cultures and that can now be studied on the Web and on online
social networks in a large scale enabled by computing power. Here, for
instance, after analyzing tweets with political content posted during
Brazilian presidential campaign, we found out that male Twitter users,
when expressing their attitude toward a given candidate, are more prone
to use imperative verbal forms in hashtags, while female users tend to
employ declarative forms. This difference can be interpreted as a sign
of distinct approaches in relation to other network members: for
example, if political hashtags are seen as strategies of persuasion in
Twitter, imperative tags could be understood as more overt ways of
persuading and declarative tags as more indirect ones. Our findings help
to understand human gendered behavior in social networks and contribute
to research on the new fields of computer-enabled Internet linguistics
and social computing, besides being useful for several computational
tasks such as developing tag recommendation systems based on users'
collective preferences and tailoring targeted advertising strategies,
among others.FGW – Publications without University Leiden contrac
Girls' disruptive behavior and its relationship to family functioning: A review
Although a number of reviews of gender differences in disruptive behavior and parental socialization exist, we extend this literature by addressing the question of differential development among girls and by placing both disruptive behavior and parenting behavior in a developmental framework. Clarifying the heterogeneity of development in girls is important for developing and optimizing gender-specific prevention and treatment programs. In the current review, we describe the unique aspects of the development of disruptive behavior in girls and explore how the gender-specific development of disruptive behavior can be explained by family linked risk and protective processes. Based on this review, we formulate a gender-specific reciprocal model of the influence of social factors on the development of disruptive behavior in girls in order to steer further research and better inform prevention and treatment programs