[4][5][6][7][8][9][1][excessive citations] It commonly covers:[3][9] In contrast to dissociative identity disorder, the social movement of people who identify as "multiple" is under-researched.
[10] According to a member of the community interviewed by Vice Magazine, the multiplicity subculture and related vocabulary originated in mailing lists of the 1980s.
[11] Vice suggests that aspects of the online multiplicity community were also found in Haitian Vodou, spirit possession and the Tibetan practice of tulpamancy.
[10] Multiplicity communities exist online through social media blogging sites like LiveJournal, Tumblr,[12][13] and more recently, TikTok, Reddit, and YouTube.
This may happen as an adaptation to a change of environment and role within a person's life and may be consciously adopted or encouraged, in a similar way to acting or role-playing.