Social media apps regularly present teens with algorithmically selected content often described as “for you,” suggesting, by implication, that the curated content is not just “for you” but also “about you” – a mirror reflecting important signals about the person you are.
All users of social media are exposed to these signals, but researchers understand that teens are at an especially malleable stage in the formation of personal identity. This raises important questions about the impact of these algorithms on how teens perceive themselves and see the world, and the subtle erosion of their privacy, which they accept in exchange for this view.
Inspired by these questions, my colleagues John Seberger and Afsaneh Razi and I asked: How are teens navigating this algorithmically generated milieu, and how do they recognize themselves in the mirror it presents? Click here to find out what we discovered.
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Teens say ‘for you’ algorithms get them right.
Photo illustration by Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Nora McDonald, George Mason University
Adolescents treat ‘for you’ algorithms as a social mirror and are willing to give up privacy to use it.
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The design and marketing of mental health chatbots may result in users’ misconceptions about their therapeutic value.
(Shutterstock)
Zoha Khawaja, Simon Fraser University; Jean-Christophe Bélisle-Pipon, Simon Fraser University
AI-powered mental health chatbots have the advantage of being easily accessible. However, users may overestimate their therapeutic benefits and underestimate their limitations.
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Cars are gathered at a port in in Yantai, Shandong province, China, for export.
Sipa US / Alamy Stock Photo
Tom Stacey, Anglia Ruskin University
Chinese car makers are finding the road to succeeding in the EU slow and bumpy.
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Amelia Hadfield, University of Surrey
Britain and France are working together to create coalitions to support Ukraine, with some success.
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Qing Wang, Warwick Business School, University of Warwick
Bernard Arnault’s five children are all involved in the luxury goods behemoth he founded - but what are the benefits and risks of keeping it in the family?
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Grigoris Argeros, Eastern Michigan University
Detroit is one of the country’s most segregated regions, but census data shows how that’s changing in both the city and suburbs.
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Hamdy A. Hassan, Zayed University
Peace in Sudan requires a focus on the concerns of historically marginalised populations in conflict zones.
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Jonny Steinberg, Yale University
Would South Africa have been torn apart by civil war without the myth of Nelson Mandela?
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Havovi Chichger, Anglia Ruskin University
The new generation of artificial sweeteners was meant to be less harmful than the previous generation. A new study suggests they might be just as harmful.
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Eloise Stevens, The Conversation
Astrophysicist Jacco van Loon joins us on The Conversation’s Curious Kids podcast.
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