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==See also==
==See also==
* [[Social media and mental health]]
* [[Social media and mental health]]
* [[Pro-ana]]
* [[Post-traumatic stress disorder]]
* [[Post-traumatic stress disorder]]



Revision as of 14:16, 1 September 2023

Multiplicity, also called plurality, is an online subculture of people having or using multiple personalities.[1][2][3] Multiplicity communities mostly exist online through social media blogging platforms[3] like TikTok.[2] Some multiplicity online spaces are support groups for related mental illness, like dissociative disorders. Due to their in-group culture, they also have been linked to iatrogenic effects like self-diagnosis of dissociative identity disorders and perpetuation of symptoms.[1][4]

Definition

The coinage multiplicity describes people displaying or experiencing multiple personalities. It commonly covers:[3][5]

Resources dedicated to multiplicity started to appear early in the internet's history.[6] According to a member of the community interviewed by Vice Magazine, the multiplicity subculture and related vocabulary originated in mailing lists of the 1980s.[3]

Vice suggests that aspects of the online multiplicity community were also found in Haitian Vodou, spirit possession and the Tibetan practice of tulpamancy.[3] Nowadays, an online subculture dedicated to tulpamancy also exists, where practitioners willfully create and entertain tulpas, a form of an imaginary friend,[7] which has been described as an online multiplicity space.[6]

Characteristics

Multiplicity communities exist online through social media blogging sites like LiveJournal, Tumblr,[8][9] and more recently, TikTok, Reddit and YouTube.[2][4] They are composed of individuals who identify as "systems" of multiple distinct personalities, often called "alters", which can have different names, ages, genders, sexualities, and personalities from one another.[8][10][6] Other jargon used within multiplicity communities includes:

  • "Fronting", of the alter currently controlling the "system".[3]
  • "Switching", when an alter fronts in place of another one.[2]
  • "Headspace" or "inner world", the concept of a mental space in which alters interact together.[8][3]
  • "Singlet", referring to a person that does not experience plurality.[1][3][5]
  • "Endogenic", of plurality that has non-traumagenic roots.[6]

Who is considered a system

A common question in online multiplicity communities is whether or not a medical condition or a medical diagnosis is required to be considered a "system".[1][3] In their 2017 study on online multiplicity, Ribáry et al. wrote that some aspects of the community cannot be explained by the medical picture of dissociative identity disorder. While studying a sample of the online multiplicity community, he noted that alters exhibited continuity in behavior and sense of self, demonstrated good everyday functioning, and lacked the diagnostic criterion of amnesia, in particular, while performing voluntary "switches".[1] Psychology Today describes members' narratives of non-disorder plurality as "often not distressing or functionally impairing" and that it may be better characterized as a form of neurodiversity.[6] Some systems consider that they were born with the condition.[1]

Online multiplicity communities may embrace all types of multiple personalities under the multiplicity label[3] or instead only cater to those reporting dissociative disorders.[2] Within those online spaces, influencers redefine multiplicity as functional multiplicity. It signifies functioning well with multiple personalities, as opposed to the traditional picture of treating dissociative identity disorder by curing its symptoms ("fusing" the personalities).[2]

Role as a support community

Participating in online multiplicity communities can remedy social isolation.[1][4] Ribáry et al. found that for participants, adopting a plural identity helps them cope with identity disorders and that discovering the notion of multiplicity and participating in related communities "is helpful and therapeutic".[1] Neuropsychologist Aubry Bakker also reports that recording daily life on social media can help fill memory holes and help with the reconciliation of dissociated identities in DID patients.[4]

Psychologist Naomi Torres-Mackie, head of research at The Mental Health Coalition, states that multiplicity-related social media content led to an increase in self-diagnosis of related disorders. She reported that her adolescent patients who frequent online multiplicity communities confuse normative experiences with having a clinical disorder.[4] Ribáry et al. wrote that participation in those online spaces prevents access to healthcare, adding that individuals with minor identity problems may develop more severe identity problems due to the social code within such communities.[1] TikTok influencers frequently portray dissociative identity disorders lightheartedly, subject to community response promoting such content and downgrading content that talks about emotional struggles.[2]

A paper published in 2022 in the journal Comprehensive Psychiatry described how prolonged social media use, especially on video-sharing platforms including TikTok, has exposed young people, largely adolescent females, a core user group of TikTok, to a growing number of content creators making videos about their self-diagnosed disorders. "An increasing number of reports from the US, UK, Germany, Canada, and Australia have noted an increase in functional tic-like behaviors prior to and during the Covid-19 pandemic, coinciding with an increase in social media content related to[…]dissociative identity disorder." The paper concluded by saying there "is an urgent need for focused empirical research investigation into this concerning phenomenon that is related to the broader research and discourse examining social media influences on mental health".[11][12][13]

Faking and fakeclaiming

The magazines Psychology Today and Teen Vogue describe accusations of "faking" and "fakeclaiming" to be commonplace in online multiplicity communities. "Faking" refers to an individual intentionally attributing a medical condition like dissociative identity disorder or OSDD to a willfully exaggerated presentation of multiple personalities. "Fakeclaiming" refers to an accusation of "faking".[4][6] Heather Hall, a psychiatrist on the board of directors for the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation, argues that such back-and-forth "faking" and "fakeclaiming" accusations have a gaslighting impact on members suffering from dissociative disorders, causing them to doubt their diagnosis.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ribáry, Gergő; Lajtai, László; Demetrovics, Zsolt; Maraz, Aniko (2017-06-13). "Multiplicity: An Explorative Interview Study on Personal Experiences of People with Multiple Selves". Frontiers in Psychology. 8: 938. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00938. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 5468408. PMID 28659840.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Lucas, Jessica (6 July 2021). "Inside TikTok's booming dissociative identity disorder community". Input. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Telfer, Tori (2015-05-11). "Are Multiple Personalities Always a Disorder?". Vice. Retrieved 2020-06-15.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Styx, Lo (2022-01-27). "Teens Are Using TikTok to Diagnose Themselves With Dissociative Identity Disorder". Teen Vogue. Retrieved 2023-06-30.
  5. ^ a b Schechter, Elizabeth. "What we can learn about respect and identity from 'plurals'". Aeon. Retrieved 2022-09-24.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "Enacted Identities: Multiplicity, Plurality, and Tulpamancy | Psychology Today". www.psychologytoday.com. Retrieved 2023-06-30.
  7. ^ Mikles, Natasha L.; Laycock, Joseph P. (2015). "Tracking the Tulpa: Exploring the "Tibetan" Origins of a Contemporary Paranormal Idea" (1): 87–. doi:10.1525/nr.2015.19.1.87. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^ a b c Riesman, Abraham (2019-03-29). "The Best Cartoonist You've Never Read Is Eight Different People". Vulture. Retrieved 2023-06-28.
  9. ^ https://www.lycoming.edu/schemata/pdfs/Sullivan.pdf
  10. ^ Parry, Sarah; Eve, Zarah; Myers, Gemma (2022-07-21). "Exploring the Utility and Personal Relevance of Co-Produced Multiplicity Resources with Young People". Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma. 15 (2): 427–439. doi:10.1007/s40653-021-00377-7. ISSN 1936-1521. PMC 9120276. PMID 35600531.
  11. ^ Davey, Melissa (2023-01-08). "'Urgent need' to understand link between teens self-diagnosing disorders and social media use, experts say". The Guardian.
  12. ^ Haltigan, John D.; Pringsheim, Tamara M.; Rajkumar, Gayathiri (2023-02-01). "Social media as an incubator of personality and behavioral psychopathology: Symptom and disorder authenticity or psychosomatic social contagion?". Comprehensive Psychiatry. 121: 152362. doi:10.1016/j.comppsych.2022.152362. PMID 36571927. S2CID 254628655.
  13. ^ Giedinghagen, Andrea (January 2023). "The tic in TikTok and (where) all systems go: Mass social media induced illness and Munchausen's by internet as explanatory models for social media associated abnormal illness behavior". Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 28 (1): 270–278. doi:10.1177/13591045221098522. ISSN 1359-1045. PMID 35473358. S2CID 248403566.

Further reading

  • Ian Hacking (2000). What's Normal?: Narratives of Mental & Emotional Disorders. Kent State University Press. pp. 39–54. ISBN 9780873386531.
  • Jennifer Radden (2011). "Multiple Selves". The Oxford Handbook of the Self. Oxford Handbooks Online. pp. 547 et seq. ISBN 9780199548019.