Tech

Most Internet trolls boast strong sadistic traits: study

One in twenty online users deliberately engage in trolling, according to a new study that also identifies those users as having the classic traits of sadism, narcissism, psychopathy and Machievellianism.

The Canadian study of 1215 people, published in ScienceDirect, asked respondents to identify the type of activities they got up to online.

This was cross-checked against other queries designed to check for the classic traits of people who fall into the “Dark Tetrad” of psychological behaviors; Machiavellianism (or willingness to manipulate people), narcissism (self-obsession), psychopathy (lack of empathy) and sadism (pleasure from suffering).

Those who identified themselves as frequent trolls slotted neatly into the categories for sadism most strongly, and narcissism the least, suggesting that it’s much more to do with enjoyment of suffering from the troll’s perspective than in boosting the troll’s self-esteem per se.

The study also assessed these traits against other common online activities such as chatting or debating, but only the respondents who self-identified as trolls matched strongly with strong negative behavioral traits.

The study identified, however, that trolls are still the internet minority, suggesting that a little over five percent of those surveyed actively trolled, compared to more than forty per cent of online users who never commented at all.

This article originally appeared on News.com.au.