Desmond Upton Patton

Desmond Upton Patton, a professor, researcher, and public interest technologist, studies the link between youth, gang violence, and social media. Courtesy photo

, a professor, researcher, and public interest technologist who studies the link between youth, gang violence, and social media, will deliver the keynote address at the diploma ceremony for the Boston College School of Social Work on May 23 on the Lower Campus Lawn.

鈥淚鈥檓 thrilled to give this keynote address at a time when social work practice and research are paramount for a thriving society,鈥 said Patton, a professor of social work, sociology, and data science at Columbia University.

Patton has dedicated his career to harnessing the power of artificial intelligence and social media to help prevent online conflicts from spilling over into real life. He carries out this mission as the founding director of the , a research initiative at Columbia focused on examining the ways in which youth of color navigate violence on and offline.

In 2013, Patton and his colleagues coined the term to refer to the phenomenon in which gang affiliates use social media sites such as Twitter to trade insults or make violent threats that lead to homicide.聽

Over the past several years, he has teamed up with youth, data scientists, and social workers to create algorithms that can analyze tweets and extract meaning from text and digital images. The researchers, he said, use and techniques to identify posts that communicate loss, aggression, and substance use, all of which could portend violence.

鈥淭he translational impact of Professor Desmond Patton鈥檚 research is vital at this time in our country and for the profession of social work,鈥 said Gautam N. Yadama, dean of the School of Social Work. 鈥淗is approach to mining social media to derive insights about youth and what matters to them is participant observation at its best. And the use of such novel approaches and insights to design social work practice with youth is on the cutting edge of social work practice.鈥

Patton is currently writing a book about a particular case of gang violence, how it has influenced his research, and why an algorithm could have prevented it. The case focuses on , a teenaged member of a gang in Chicago who tweeted 鈥渢he pain is unbearable鈥 after her friend was killed in April 2014. About a week later, Barnes was shot and killed.聽

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to understand loss and trauma within a social media context and develop interventions that provide young people with support as they鈥檙e leveraging these tools to get help,鈥 said Patton, who served as a visiting scholar at the School of Social Work from January to June 2020. 鈥淭he problem is things are just sitting on platforms, but I鈥檓 also seeing them, particularly for young Black and brown folks, as places to get help.鈥

Patton believes that social workers need to find more ways to incorporate technology into their work with clients and communities, saying that courses in technology should become a standard component of social work curriculums. One of his primary concerns is figuring out how practitioners could use artificial intelligence, chatbots, and virtual reality to improve the health and wellness of people around the world.聽

He envisions a day in which social workers are collaborating with engineers and computer scientists to create the technology of the future鈥攊ncluding the algorithms that dictate our lives.聽

鈥淚n the medical model, there鈥檚 a doctor, a social worker, and a nurse,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n the engineering model, there should be an engineer, a product manager, and a social worker. That would be the ideal.鈥

We鈥檙e trying to understand loss and trauma within a social media context and develop interventions that provide young people with support as they鈥檙e leveraging these tools to get help.
Desmond Upton Patton, professor, researcher, and public interest technologist

Patton鈥檚 research on Internet banging has appeared in numerous media outlets, including , , and . It was cited in an amici curiae brief submitted to the United States Supreme Court in , which examined how threats are interpreted on social media.

Patton has published dozens of articles in peer-reviewed publications, among them the Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research, New Media and Society, and The Journal of Men鈥檚 Studies. One recent paper, in Children and Youth Services Review, found that adolescents are acutely aware that social media features, such as comments and live video, have the power to turn online conflict into offline fights.

鈥淥ur findings underscore that adolescents engaged in social media threats often do not go online with the intention to fight,鈥 Patton and his coauthors wrote. 鈥淩ather, adolescents expressed keen awareness that social media intensifies interpersonal slights, and specifically identified video streaming and comments as social media features that intensify social media threats, increasing the likelihood of offline violence.鈥

Patton has received more than a dozen prestigious honors and fellowships during his career, including the 2018 from the Society for Social Work and Research. He won the award, according to SSWR, 鈥渋n recognition of his notable influence on understanding the links between traditional forms of gang violence and threatening social media communication and his noteworthy contributions to advance the social work profession.鈥

In addition to his professorship at Columbia, Patton serves as senior associate dean for academic affairs and curriculum innovation at the university鈥檚 School of Social Work. He is the associate director of diversity, equity, and inclusion for the university鈥檚 and a faculty affiliate of its . Before joining the faculty at Columbia in 2015, he served as an assistant professor at the University of Michigan School of Social Work and School of Information.

Patton holds a bachelor鈥檚 degree in anthropology and political science from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, a master鈥檚 in social work from the University of Michigan, and a doctorate in social service administration from the University of Chicago.

The diploma ceremony for the School of Social Work will start at approximately noon. Several soon-to-be-graduates will be involved in the festivities. Mai Kim Pham, MSW鈥22, will deliver the invocation and Samira Al-Ghuiyy Bell, MSW鈥22, will give the student address. Jason Lawrence Madden, MSW鈥22, and Kimberly Hokanson, PhD鈥22, will serve as the degree representatives. Seating for guests on the Lower Campus Lawn is first come, first served. People who are unable to attend the event can livestream the ceremony on the University鈥檚 Commencement page.