Illicit Drug Purchases via Social Media Among American Young People

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Illicit Drug Purchases via Social Media Among American Young People. / Oksanen, Atte; Miller, Bryan Lee; Savolainen, Iina ; Sirola, Anu; Demant, Jakob Johan; Kaakinen, Markus; Zych, Izabela .

Social Computing and Social Media: Design, Ethics, User Behavior, and Social Network Analysis. red. / G. Meiselwitz. Bind 12194 Cham : Springer, 2020. s. 278-288 (Lecture Notes in Computer Science).

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Oksanen, A, Miller, BL, Savolainen, I, Sirola, A, Demant, JJ, Kaakinen, M & Zych, I 2020, Illicit Drug Purchases via Social Media Among American Young People. i G Meiselwitz (red.), Social Computing and Social Media: Design, Ethics, User Behavior, and Social Network Analysis. bind 12194, Springer, Cham, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, s. 278-288.

APA

Oksanen, A., Miller, B. L., Savolainen, I., Sirola, A., Demant, J. J., Kaakinen, M., & Zych, I. (2020). Illicit Drug Purchases via Social Media Among American Young People. I G. Meiselwitz (red.), Social Computing and Social Media: Design, Ethics, User Behavior, and Social Network Analysis (Bind 12194, s. 278-288). Springer. Lecture Notes in Computer Science

Vancouver

Oksanen A, Miller BL, Savolainen I, Sirola A, Demant JJ, Kaakinen M o.a. Illicit Drug Purchases via Social Media Among American Young People. I Meiselwitz G, red., Social Computing and Social Media: Design, Ethics, User Behavior, and Social Network Analysis. Bind 12194. Cham: Springer. 2020. s. 278-288. (Lecture Notes in Computer Science).

Author

Oksanen, Atte ; Miller, Bryan Lee ; Savolainen, Iina ; Sirola, Anu ; Demant, Jakob Johan ; Kaakinen, Markus ; Zych, Izabela . / Illicit Drug Purchases via Social Media Among American Young People. Social Computing and Social Media: Design, Ethics, User Behavior, and Social Network Analysis. red. / G. Meiselwitz. Bind 12194 Cham : Springer, 2020. s. 278-288 (Lecture Notes in Computer Science).

Bibtex

@inbook{be5fca4de67245d5b7ab468e9f3c1d5a,
title = "Illicit Drug Purchases via Social Media Among American Young People",
abstract = "Illicit drugs are sold online. Besides cryptomarkets, young people today are also using social media to buy and sell different drugs. The aim of this nationwide study was to investigate the phenomenon of buying drugs from social media among American young people. Relatively few studies have investigated young people buying drugs online and, therefore, it is important to know more about the psychological and social risk factors of this behavior. The participants of the study were 15–25-year-olds from the U.S. (M = 20.05; 50.17% female). Buying drugs online was utilized as an outcome variable. The covariates included measures of impulsivity and delay of gratification, sense of belonging to online communities, online homophily, friends sharing risk material online, psychological distress, and measures for addictive behaviors including hazardous drinking, problem gambling, and compulsive Internet use. Results showed that buying drugs online is still a relatively rare phenomenon, but many of those buying drugs online used social media services to do so. Buying drugs online was associated with higher impulsivity and lower measures of delay discounting indicating self-control problems. Online buyers also had multiple problems with mental wellbeing, as they reported more psychological distress, problem gambling, and compulsive Internet use than those drug users who had not bought drugs online. The existence and comorbidity of these problems suggest that drug availability online might worsen their situation. As impulsive decisions are especially easy to make on social media, more focus should be placed on youth behavior on mainstream social media services.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Drugs, Internet, Social Media, Young adults, Wellbeing",
author = "Atte Oksanen and Miller, {Bryan Lee} and Iina Savolainen and Anu Sirola and Demant, {Jakob Johan} and Markus Kaakinen and Izabela Zych",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-030-49569-5",
volume = "12194",
series = "Lecture Notes in Computer Science",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "278--288",
editor = "G. Meiselwitz",
booktitle = "Social Computing and Social Media",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Illicit Drug Purchases via Social Media Among American Young People

AU - Oksanen, Atte

AU - Miller, Bryan Lee

AU - Savolainen, Iina

AU - Sirola, Anu

AU - Demant, Jakob Johan

AU - Kaakinen, Markus

AU - Zych, Izabela

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Illicit drugs are sold online. Besides cryptomarkets, young people today are also using social media to buy and sell different drugs. The aim of this nationwide study was to investigate the phenomenon of buying drugs from social media among American young people. Relatively few studies have investigated young people buying drugs online and, therefore, it is important to know more about the psychological and social risk factors of this behavior. The participants of the study were 15–25-year-olds from the U.S. (M = 20.05; 50.17% female). Buying drugs online was utilized as an outcome variable. The covariates included measures of impulsivity and delay of gratification, sense of belonging to online communities, online homophily, friends sharing risk material online, psychological distress, and measures for addictive behaviors including hazardous drinking, problem gambling, and compulsive Internet use. Results showed that buying drugs online is still a relatively rare phenomenon, but many of those buying drugs online used social media services to do so. Buying drugs online was associated with higher impulsivity and lower measures of delay discounting indicating self-control problems. Online buyers also had multiple problems with mental wellbeing, as they reported more psychological distress, problem gambling, and compulsive Internet use than those drug users who had not bought drugs online. The existence and comorbidity of these problems suggest that drug availability online might worsen their situation. As impulsive decisions are especially easy to make on social media, more focus should be placed on youth behavior on mainstream social media services.

AB - Illicit drugs are sold online. Besides cryptomarkets, young people today are also using social media to buy and sell different drugs. The aim of this nationwide study was to investigate the phenomenon of buying drugs from social media among American young people. Relatively few studies have investigated young people buying drugs online and, therefore, it is important to know more about the psychological and social risk factors of this behavior. The participants of the study were 15–25-year-olds from the U.S. (M = 20.05; 50.17% female). Buying drugs online was utilized as an outcome variable. The covariates included measures of impulsivity and delay of gratification, sense of belonging to online communities, online homophily, friends sharing risk material online, psychological distress, and measures for addictive behaviors including hazardous drinking, problem gambling, and compulsive Internet use. Results showed that buying drugs online is still a relatively rare phenomenon, but many of those buying drugs online used social media services to do so. Buying drugs online was associated with higher impulsivity and lower measures of delay discounting indicating self-control problems. Online buyers also had multiple problems with mental wellbeing, as they reported more psychological distress, problem gambling, and compulsive Internet use than those drug users who had not bought drugs online. The existence and comorbidity of these problems suggest that drug availability online might worsen their situation. As impulsive decisions are especially easy to make on social media, more focus should be placed on youth behavior on mainstream social media services.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Drugs

KW - Internet

KW - Social Media

KW - Young adults

KW - Wellbeing

UR - https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-030-49570-1_19

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-3-030-49569-5

VL - 12194

T3 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science

SP - 278

EP - 288

BT - Social Computing and Social Media

A2 - Meiselwitz, G.

PB - Springer

CY - Cham

ER -

ID: 245666720