ArXiv TLDR

Attention: What Prevents Young Adults from Speaking Up Against Cyberbullying in an LLM-Powered Social Media Simulation

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2605.03287

Qian Yang, Jessie Jia, Elaine Tsai, Amy Li, Nader Akoury + 1 more

cs.HCcs.CY

TLDR

LLM-powered social media simulations help young adults intervene against cyberbullying, but only after critical shifts in attention and focus.

Key contributions

  • Developed Upstanders' Practicum, an LLM-powered social media simulation for cyberbullying intervention.
  • Identified three crucial attention shifts required for young adults to effectively speak up publicly.
  • Participants learned to craft tactful public messages without explicit instruction after these shifts.
  • Open-sourced Truman Agents, a multi-LLM-agent platform for future social media research.

Why it matters

This paper offers new insights into designing bystander education beyond just social skill instruction, emphasizing fostering attention and an upstander identity. It also provides a valuable open-source multi-LLM-agent platform for future cyberbullying research.

Original Abstract

Interactive, multi-agent social simulation systems have shown promise for helping users practice navigating various complex social situations across domains. This paper asks: To what extent can such systems help young adult (YA) bystanders speak up publicly against cyberbullying, a task often thwarted by complex, multi-party social dynamics? We created Upstanders' Practicum, a multi-AI-agent social media simulation powered by Large Language Models (LLMs), as a probe and observed 34 YAs freely practicing public bystander intervention across three iteratively refined versions. We found that practicing public bystander intervention in the simulation was helpful, but after participants made three attention shifts: (1) from inattention to paying true attention, (2) from self-focus ("I don't usually do this'') to attending to those directly involved, and (3) from resolving the private conflict between bully and victim ("maybe I could set up the meeting between them'') to addressing the broader audience online ("public comment is about norm-setting"). Only after these shifts did practice in the simulation start to help: participants then saw a reason to speak up publicly and, through continued practice, crafted tactful public messages without explicit instruction. These findings illuminate new design and research opportunities for bystander education beyond social skill instruction, namely, designing for true attention, for fostering a vocal upstander identity, and for seeing bystander intervention as public norm setting. In addition, we open-source Truman Agents (cornell-design-aigroup.github.io/TrumanAgents/), the first-of-its-kind multi-LLM-agent social media simulation platform that Upstanders' Practicum builds upon, for future cyberbullying and social media research.

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