1,687 research outputs found
A Human-Machine Collaborative System for Identifying Rumors on Twitter
The spread of rumors on social media, especially in time-sensitive situations such as real-world emergencies, can have harmful effects on individuals and society. In this work, we developed a human-machine collaborative system on Twitter for fast identification of rumors about real-world events. The system reduces the amount of information that users have to sift through in order to identify rumors about real-world events by several orders of magnitude
A Semi-automatic Method for Efficient Detection of Stories on Social Media
Twitter has become one of the main sources of news for many people. As
real-world events and emergencies unfold, Twitter is abuzz with hundreds of
thousands of stories about the events. Some of these stories are harmless,
while others could potentially be life-saving or sources of malicious rumors.
Thus, it is critically important to be able to efficiently track stories that
spread on Twitter during these events. In this paper, we present a novel
semi-automatic tool that enables users to efficiently identify and track
stories about real-world events on Twitter. We ran a user study with 25
participants, demonstrating that compared to more conventional methods, our
tool can increase the speed and the accuracy with which users can track stories
about real-world events.Comment: ICWSM'16, May 17-20, Cologne, Germany. In Proceedings of the 10th
International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media (ICWSM 2016).
Cologne, German
False News On Social Media: A Data-Driven Survey
In the past few years, the research community has dedicated growing interest
to the issue of false news circulating on social networks. The widespread
attention on detecting and characterizing false news has been motivated by
considerable backlashes of this threat against the real world. As a matter of
fact, social media platforms exhibit peculiar characteristics, with respect to
traditional news outlets, which have been particularly favorable to the
proliferation of deceptive information. They also present unique challenges for
all kind of potential interventions on the subject. As this issue becomes of
global concern, it is also gaining more attention in academia. The aim of this
survey is to offer a comprehensive study on the recent advances in terms of
detection, characterization and mitigation of false news that propagate on
social media, as well as the challenges and the open questions that await
future research on the field. We use a data-driven approach, focusing on a
classification of the features that are used in each study to characterize
false information and on the datasets used for instructing classification
methods. At the end of the survey, we highlight emerging approaches that look
most promising for addressing false news
Tweet Acts: A Speech Act Classifier for Twitter
Speech acts are a way to conceptualize speech as action. This holds true for
communication on any platform, including social media platforms such as
Twitter. In this paper, we explored speech act recognition on Twitter by
treating it as a multi-class classification problem. We created a taxonomy of
six speech acts for Twitter and proposed a set of semantic and syntactic
features. We trained and tested a logistic regression classifier using a data
set of manually labelled tweets. Our method achieved a state-of-the-art
performance with an average F1 score of more than . We also explored
classifiers with three different granularities (Twitter-wide, type-specific and
topic-specific) in order to find the right balance between generalization and
overfitting for our task.Comment: ICWSM'16, May 17-20, Cologne, Germany. In Proceedings of the 10th
AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media (ICWSM 2016). Cologne, German
Deception Detection and Rumor Debunking for Social Media
Abstract
The main premise of this chapter is that the time is ripe for more extensive research and development of social media tools that filter out intentionally deceptive information such as deceptive memes, rumors and hoaxes, fake news or other fake posts, tweets and fraudulent profiles. Social media users’ awareness of intentional manipulation of online content appears to be relatively low, while the reliance on unverified information (often obtained from strangers) is at an all-time high. I argue there is need for content verification, systematic fact-checking and filtering of social media streams. This literature survey provides a background for understanding current automated deception detection research, rumor debunking, and broader content verification methodologies, suggests a path towards hybrid technologies, and explains why the development and adoption of such tools might still be a significant challenge
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