YouthCare: Building a Personalized Collaborative Video Censorship Tool to Support Parent-Child Joint Media Engagement
By: Wenxin Zhao , Fangyu Yu , Peng Zhang and more
Potential Business Impact:
Helps parents and kids pick good videos together.
To mitigate the negative impacts of online videos on teenagers, existing research and platforms have implemented various parental mediation mechanisms, such as Parent-Child Joint Media Engagement (JME). However, JME generally relies heavily on parents' time, knowledge, and experience. To fill this gap, we aim to design an automatic tool to help parents/children censor videos more effectively and efficiently in JME. For this goal, we first conducted a formative study to identify the needs and expectations of teenagers and parents for such a system. Based on the findings, we designed YouthCare, a personalized collaborative video censorship tool that supports parents and children to collaboratively filter out inappropriate content and select appropriate content in JME. An evaluation with 10 parent-child pairs demonstrated YouthCare's several strengths in supporting video censorship, while also highlighting some potential problems. These findings inspire us to propose several insights for the future design of parent-child collaborative JME systems.
Similar Papers
Figame: A Family Digital Game Based on JME for Shaping Parent-Child Healthy Gaming Relationship
Human-Computer Interaction
Helps parents and kids play games together better.
Protecting Young Users on Social Media: Evaluating the Effectiveness of Content Moderation and Legal Safeguards on Video Sharing Platforms
Social and Information Networks
Younger kids see bad videos faster online.
Designing for Engaging Communication Between Parents and Young Adult Children Through Shared Music Experiences
Human-Computer Interaction
Lets families share music, talk more, and feel closer.