Misogynistic tweets can be used to track and predict domestic violence, study finds


Misogynistic tweets can be used to track and predict domestic violence, study finds

  • Australian study found link between misogynistic tweets and domestic violence
  • Connection can be made despite presence of factors such as alcohol, inequality
  • UNSW study is the first to use big data to predict domestic violence from tweets

Places where there’s a lot of misogynistic tweeting are also likely to have a lot of cases of domestic violence, a new Australian study has found.

The connection to domestic and family violence can be made despite the presence of factors such as alcohol and inequality, the University of NSW study said.

Examples of misogynistic tweets identified by the researchers included, ‘Women are all bitches’, ‘Whore had it coming’, and ‘Make me a sandwich, slut’.

Places where there's a lot of misogynistic tweeting are also likely to have a lot of cases of domestic violence, a new Australian study has found (stock image)

Places where there’s a lot of misogynistic tweeting are also likely to have a lot of cases of domestic violence, a new Australian study has found (stock image)

‘We found that misogynistic social media may not be harmless,’ Professor Tom Denson from the UNSW School of Psychology said.

‘It contributes to norms of violence toward women and a hostile worldview that may slip into real-world violence.

‘I imagine a lot of people are fairly flippant about what is posted on social media.

‘This study suggests caution about posting misogynistic hate speech as even if the person who posts is not violent, such posts seem to create an atmosphere where violence toward women may be more likely.’

The UNSW study is the first to use big data to predict domestic violence from misogynistic tweets across a two-year period.

‘There is a growing interest in using big data to help address social problems such as criminality,’ Prof Denson said.

The research team compiled data reported by local law enforcement agencies in the US to the Federal Bureau of Investigation on arrests for domestic and family violence over a two-year period from 2013 to 2014.

They also collected data on a number of population-level factors known to influence domestic and family violence, such as the availability of alcohol, income inequality, gender inequality and population size.

The connection to domestic and family violence can be made despite the presence of factors such as alcohol and inequality, the University of NSW study said (stock image)

The connection to domestic and family violence can be made despite the presence of factors such as alcohol and inequality, the University of NSW study said (stock image)

‘We then collected Twitter data from 2013-2014,’ Prof Denson said.

‘We coded those tweets for misogynistic content using automated methods and used a geolocation algorithm to locate the origin of the tweets, which we were able to do with a pretty high degree of spatial specificity based on US Census Bureau defined areas.’

The researchers ended up with tweets from 827 areas in 47 American states.

‘We then combined the data sets and used the number of misogynistic tweets in each area to examine the relationship between misogynistic tweets and domestic and family violence arrests, while controlling for things like alcohol availability, population, and inequality.’

The research is part of a growing number of studies examining the extent to which social media can be used to learn more about criminal offending, study co-author Siobhan O’Dean said.

‘That information could be useful for not only law enforcement but also public health interventions which may intervene to counteract norms of misogynistic violence,’ Ms O’Dean said.

The UNSW study was published in the journal Psychological Science.

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