Journal article

Incel Activity on Social Media Linked to Local Mating Ecology

RC Brooks, D Russo-Batterham, KR Blake

Psychological Science | Published : 2022

Abstract

Young men with few prospects of attracting a mate have historically threatened the internal peace and stability of societies. In some contemporary societies, such involuntary celibate—or incel—men promote much online misogyny and perpetrate real-world violence. We tested the prediction that online incel activity arises via local real-world mating-market forces that affect relationship formation. From a database of 4 billion Twitter posts (2012–2018), we geolocated 321 million tweets to 582 commuting zones in the continental United States, of which 3,649 tweets used words peculiar to incels and 3,745 were about incels. We show that such tweets arise disproportionately within places where mati..

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Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

The Australian Research Council ( DP160100459) and the Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences funded this work. Geolocation was supported by a National Computational Infrastructure Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities (LIEF) Grant (LE190100021) and by The University of Melbourne.