TY - JOUR
T1 - Disruptive online communication: How asymmetric trolling-like response strategies steer conversation off the track
AU - Paakki, Henna
AU - Vepsäläinen, Heidi
AU - Salovaara, Antti
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - Internet trolling, a form of antisocial online behavior, is a serious problem plaguing social media. Skillful trolls can lure entire communities into degenerative and polarized discussions that continue endlessly. From analysis of data gathered in accordance with established classifications of trolling-like behavior, the paper presents a conversation analysis of trolling-like interaction strategies that disrupt online discussions. The authors argue that troll-like users exploit other users’ desire for common grounding – i.e., joint maintenance of mutual understanding and seeking of conversational closure – by responding asymmetrically. Their responses to others deviate from expectations for typical paired actions in turn-taking. These asymmetries, described through examples of three such behaviors – ignoring, mismatching, and challenging – lead to dissatisfactory interactions, in that they subvert other users’ desire for clarification and explanation of contra-normative social behavior. By avoiding clarifi- cations, troll-like users easily capture unsuspecting users’ attention and manage to prolong futile conversations interminably. Through the analysis, the paper connects trolling-like asymmetric response strategies with concrete data and addresses the implications of this nonconformist behavior for common grounding in social-media venues.
AB - Internet trolling, a form of antisocial online behavior, is a serious problem plaguing social media. Skillful trolls can lure entire communities into degenerative and polarized discussions that continue endlessly. From analysis of data gathered in accordance with established classifications of trolling-like behavior, the paper presents a conversation analysis of trolling-like interaction strategies that disrupt online discussions. The authors argue that troll-like users exploit other users’ desire for common grounding – i.e., joint maintenance of mutual understanding and seeking of conversational closure – by responding asymmetrically. Their responses to others deviate from expectations for typical paired actions in turn-taking. These asymmetries, described through examples of three such behaviors – ignoring, mismatching, and challenging – lead to dissatisfactory interactions, in that they subvert other users’ desire for clarification and explanation of contra-normative social behavior. By avoiding clarifi- cations, troll-like users easily capture unsuspecting users’ attention and manage to prolong futile conversations interminably. Through the analysis, the paper connects trolling-like asymmetric response strategies with concrete data and addresses the implications of this nonconformist behavior for common grounding in social-media venues.
KW - Asymmetric responses
KW - CMC
KW - Common grounding
KW - Conversation analysis
KW - Disruptive communication
KW - Trolling
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85107502874&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10606-021-09397-1
DO - 10.1007/s10606-021-09397-1
M3 - Article
VL - 30
SP - 425
EP - 461
JO - COMPUTER SUPPORTED COOPERATIVE WORK: THE JOURNAL OF COLLABORATIVE COMPUTING
JF - COMPUTER SUPPORTED COOPERATIVE WORK: THE JOURNAL OF COLLABORATIVE COMPUTING
SN - 0925-9724
IS - 3
ER -