Shah, MansiMartin, GeorgeBao, Zhuoran2023-02-092023-02-092022-05-10Do, A., Dasondi, M., Forry, T., Martin, G., Bao, Z., & Bavley, C. (2022). Self splintering: Dissociative identity disorder. Grey Matters, 3, pp. 28-35.http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/8365In the modern age of the Internet, it has become popular amongst users on social media websites, such as TikTok and Tumblr, to self-diagnose with different disorders. The most popular example of this is TikTok, where many who claim to be medical professionals or have a certain disorder say statements such as “Scientists say if you can’t see the illusion in this video, you have depression,” or “If you show XYZ trait, you have autism.” A disorder that is commonly brought up when talking about self-diagnosis is Dissociative Personality Disorder (DID), previously known as Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD). The name change occurred in 1994, due to learning new information about the disorder [1]. MPD implies that many personalities are in one person, while DID implies that one personality has been split into many parts.11 pagesengAll Rights ReservedMultiple personalityPersonality disorders--DiagnosisDissociative disorders--DiagnosisSelf Splintering: Dissociative Identity DisorderText