Requiem for Online Harassers: Identifying Racism from Political Tweets

被引:0
|
作者
Lozano, Estefania [1 ]
Cedeno, Jorge [1 ]
Castillo, Galo [1 ]
Layedra, Fabricio [1 ]
Lasso, Henry [1 ]
Vaca, Carmen [1 ]
机构
[1] Escuela Super Politecn Litoral, Fac Ingn Elect & Comp, ESPOL, Campus Gustavo Galindo Km 30-5 Via Perimetral, Guayaquil, Ecuador
来源
2017 FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDEMOCRACY & EGOVERNMENT (ICEDEG) | 2017年
关键词
racism; social media; twitter; homophily; sentiment analysis;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TP39 [计算机的应用];
学科分类号
081203 ; 0835 ;
摘要
During the last five years, the amount of users of online social networks has increased exponentially. With the growing of users, social problems also arise. Due to the nature of these platforms, specifically Twitter, users can express their ideas in the way they prefer no matter if it is racist or not. As the Twitter CEO says, one of the most difficult things for them is to detect and ban people who harass others. Researches have addressed this issue in recent years. However, it is needed a wider range of strategies to detect racist users and content. In this work, we collect tweets produced by the ego networks of the two former 2016 US Presidential Candidates: Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, grouped in four datasets. After deleting spammers, we get 84,371 unique users labeled by using two different metrics: Sentiment Word Count and Racist Score. Both of them let us not only to identify users as racists, but also to detect the level of negativism by analyzing their most recent 200 tweets, increasing the effectiveness of the method. Using it, we find the most negative and racist user and the most positive and non-racist user from all datasets. Taking advantage of the topological properties of the ego networks we analyzed, we also verify that our results satisfy the sociologist theory of homophily; where the followers of each candidate represent their homophilous. For a nation as the United States of America, detecting online harassers might help to decrease racism and cyberbullying, social problems that affect their society. A world without online harassers is an utopia, but this is one step to achieve it.
引用
收藏
页码:154 / 160
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The barriers to regulating the online world: Insights from UK debates on online political advertising
    Dommett, Katharine
    Zhu, Junyan
    POLICY AND INTERNET, 2022, 14 (04): : 772 - 787
  • [42] Online political efficacy and political participation: A mediation analysis based on the evidence from Taiwan
    Chen, Chao
    Bai, Yu
    Wang, Rui
    NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY, 2019, 21 (08) : 1667 - 1696
  • [44] From Online Political Posting to Mansplaining: The Gender Gap and Social Media in Political Discussion
    Koc-Michalska, Karolina
    Schiffrin, Anya
    Lopez, Anamaria
    Boulianne, Shelley
    Bimber, Bruce
    SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW, 2021, 39 (02) : 197 - 210
  • [45] Identifying Sentiment-Dependent Product Features from Online Reviews
    Suryadi, Dedy
    Kim, Harrison M.
    DESIGN COMPUTING AND COGNITION '16, 2017, : 685 - 701
  • [46] Identifying Suggestions for Improvement of Product Features from Online Product Reviews
    Jhamtani, Harsh
    Chhaya, Niyati
    Karwa, Shweta
    Varshney, Devesh
    Kedia, Deepam
    Gupta, Vineet
    SOCIAL INFORMATICS (SOCINFO 2015), 2015, 9471 : 112 - 119
  • [47] From Gamergate to FIFA: Identifying Polarized Groups in Online Social Media
    Warmsley, Dana
    Xu, Jiejun
    Lu, Tsai-Ching
    2018 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BIG DATA (BIG DATA), 2018, : 3991 - 3995
  • [48] Identifying comparable entities from online question-answering contents
    Zhang, Jin
    Wang, Liye
    Wang, Kanliang
    INFORMATION & MANAGEMENT, 2021, 58 (03)
  • [49] Learning from Incidental Exposure to Political Information in Online Environments
    Nanz, Andreas
    Matthes, Jorg
    JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2020, 70 (06) : 769 - 793
  • [50] Managing Online Trolling: From Deviant to Social and Political Trolls
    Sanfilippo, Madelyn R.
    Yang, Shengnan
    Fichman, Pnina
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 50TH ANNUAL HAWAII INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2017, : 1802 - 1811