Showing posts with label risk_taking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label risk_taking. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 June 2019

10 Tips About Mental Health Vulnerability Online

a post by Will Van Der Hart for the Mind and Soul Foundation blog

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One question I get asked really regularly is about sharing my emotional/mental health struggles online. Having just written a book with the subtitle, “Discovering the confidence to lead with vulnerability”, I guess its not surprising! The thing about vulnerability though is that it’s not about being a ‘bleeding heart in the public square.’ Oversharing isn’t healthy vulnerability, it’s a damaging way of us manipulating other people’s emotions towards us. This is the difference between ‘being vulnerable’ and ‘using vulnerability’.

The first thing I always ask myself when I am posting something personal online is, “What am I trying to do here?” If I am using vulnerability, the answer could be more direct: I want sympathy, I want attention, I want acclaim. In my experience oversharing nearly always results from an ‘I want’.

If I am being healthily vulnerable the answer to that question isn’t nearly so stark. It may be as simple as ‘I’m just being me’ or ‘I am trying to model something’ or ‘I am trying to help people who may be in a similar situation.’ I would say pretty much without exception that nothing good has ever come out of me oversharing online, inversely I know the my ‘being vulnerable’ has been helpful to myself and others. Even when your intentions are good, posting about your own mental health online carries its own pressures and risks. Over the last 14 years I have made quite a few mistakes and learnt a few hard lessons. Here are a few of my top tips (not forgetting all of the usual guidelines about staying safe online.)

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Monday, 17 June 2019

Identifying risky Internet use: Associating negative online experience with specific online behaviours

an article by Sally M Gainsbury (The University of Sydney, Australia) and Matthew Browne and Matthew Rockloff (Central Queensland University, Australia) published in New Media & Society Volume 21 Issue 6 (June 2019)

Abstract

Experiencing negative outcomes online is increasingly common, with more people active online and the continued presence of aggressive online behaviours.

This study sought to uncover the underlying factor structure of negative online consequences. It investigated how experiencing negative outcomes is associated with engaging in specific online activities. Australian adult Internet users (N = 1773, mean age = 42.5 years, 54.8% female) completed an online survey.

An underlying factor structure was identified with subgroups of negative outcomes identified relating to hacking/identity theft, abuse/harassment, non-targeted scams and targeted scams. Victimisation was associated with engagement with online pornography and forums; use of multiple discussion forums, dating, and gaming sites; and expenditure on gaming, dating and pornography sites.

Results suggest that overall Internet involvement does not predict victimisation, but specific activities are linked to certain harms.

This research creates a framework to inform policy and practice to minimise online victimisation and guide ongoing research.




Monday, 25 March 2019

Warning: music therapy comes with risks

a post by James Hiller and Susan C. Gardstrom published in the OUP blog


“a group of musical instruments including a guitar, drum, and keyboard” by Brian Goodman. Royalty free via Shutterstock

Bob Marley sings, “One good thing about music—when it hits you, you feel no pain.” Although this may be the case for some people and in some circumstances, we dispute this statement as a global truth. After all, couldn’t any phenomenon commanding enough to alleviate human pain (ostensibly instantaneously) also harbor the potential to catalyze undesirable, even injurious, effects? And couldn’t this influence then logically extend to music employed within the context of a therapeutic process?

As music therapist and Concordia University Associate Professor Dr. Laurel Young writes, “the ‘miraculous’ effects of music as featured in popular media along with the widely accepted notion that music is a ‘universal’ medium can lead to false generalizations and over-simplification of how music can and should be used in healthcare or other psychosocial contexts.” One possible manifestation of this oversimplification is to view music as a noninvasive and wholly-positive cure-all, and thus disregard the potential risks associated with music engagement.

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Monday, 2 April 2018

Low risk as a predictor of financial crises

a column by Jon Danielsson, Marcela Valenzuela and Ilknur Zer for VOX: CEPR’s Policy Portal

Reliable indicators of future financial crises are important for policymakers and practitioners. While most indicators consider an observation of high volatility as a warning signal, this column argues that such an alarm comes too late, arriving only once a crisis is already under way. A better warning is provided by low volatility, which is a reliable indication of an increased likelihood of a future crisis.


Figure 1: The relationship between volatility and financial crises

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