Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

 
 
Session Overview
Session
Appfied Cultures
Time:
Saturday, 18/Oct/2025:
11:00am - 12:30pm

Session Chair: Eloy Santos Vieira
Location: Room 10a - Groundfloor

Novo IACS (Instituto de Arte e Comunicação Social) São Domingos, Niterói - State of Rio de Janeiro, 24210-200, Brazil

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Presentations
ID: 1037 / Appfied Cultures: 1
Paper Proposal
Onsite - English
Topics: Method - Interviews/Focus Groups, Topic - Gender/Sexuality/Feminism/Queer Theory, Topic - Platform Studies
Keywords: safety, dating apps, control, harms

Understanding ‘safety’ on dating apps: control features, user perceptions, and app imaginaries

Brady Robards, Lisa Wheildon, Asher Flynn, Zarina Vakhitova, Bridget Harris

Monash, Australia

What does it mean to be ‘safe’ on dating and hook-up apps? As apps have become common channels for meeting and connecting with romantic and sexual partners, they have also become focal points in discussions of power (Young & Roberts 2023), the commodification of intimacy (Bandinelli & Alessandro 2022), racism (Carlson 2019), and safety (Albury et al. 2020; Albury & Byron 2016) where platforms are increasingly called upon to take more responsibility. In 2024, the Australian government released an industry code to ‘improve safety’ for users on these platforms, calling for better systems to detect and act in response to incidents of harm including reporting mechanisms, support resources, transparency reports, and engagement with law enforcement. In this paper we explore a diverse range of experiences and perceptions of safety and control functions on dating and hook-up apps, drawing from focus groups and interviews with 104 people in Australia alongside a mapping of the safety and control features on three apps: Tinder, Bumble, and Grindr. Our participants varied in terms of gender (67% female, 30% male, 3% non-binary), age (13-74), sexuality (54% straight, 24% LGBTQ, 22% unsure or unspecified), cultural background, and socio-economics. In our analysis we explore gaps in awareness of app functionality, perceptions of the effectiveness (or lack thereof) of safety controls, and the ideas users had to make apps safer for them. We seek to connect public concerns around safety with a critique of narrow, heteronormative, individualised, and institutional framings of the notion of safety.



ID: 317 / Appfied Cultures: 2
Paper Proposal
Onsite - English
Topics: Method - Critique/Criticism/Theory, Method - Interviews/Focus Groups, Topic - Children/Childhood/Youth/Families
Keywords: datafication, children, data welfare state, care, response-ability

DIGITAL PARENTING IN THE AGE OF DATAFICATION: A CARE PERSPECTIVE

Victoria Andelsman

University of Copenhagen, Denmark

This paper proposes a feminist care framework for understanding digital parenting, i.e., how parents utilize digital media in child-rearing, emphasizing the entanglement of interpersonal and institutional practices. Using Denmark as a case study, this paper contends that a focus on voluntary practices overlooks the influential role that corporations and state institutions play in shaping the need for digital parenting. Instead, it advocates for a relational approach that addresses the interconnected dynamics of care and responsibility in the digital age. Interviews with parents living in Denmark highlight digital parenting’s dual nature as both enabling and coercive, as well as intimate and public. The paper concludes by calling for collective efforts to develop supportive digital infrastructures.



ID: 178 / Appfied Cultures: 3
Paper Proposal
Onsite - English
Topics: Method - Content/Textual/Visual Analysis, Topic - Health/Wellness, Topic - Platform Studies
Keywords: Douyin, Short videos, Health communication, Healthcare professionals

From Scrubs to Scrolling: Healthcare Professionals on Douyin

Xinna Li

University College Dublin, Ireland

Short video platforms are reshaping health communication, yet how healthcare professionals use them to present their expertise in a digital space governed by both entertainment-driven engagement metrics and regulatory constraints remains understudied. This study examines how verified healthcare professionals use Douyin, China's leading short video platform, to engage in health communication. Through content analysis of 130 highly engaged videos and 58 professionals' homepages, this study investigates the characteristics of the healthcare professionals on Douyin, how they present themselves, and what strategies they use to balance medical credibility with Douyin's entertainment-driven nature.