59,312 research outputs found
White, Man, and Highly Followed: Gender and Race Inequalities in Twitter
Social media is considered a democratic space in which people connect and
interact with each other regardless of their gender, race, or any other
demographic factor. Despite numerous efforts that explore demographic factors
in social media, it is still unclear whether social media perpetuates old
inequalities from the offline world. In this paper, we attempt to identify
gender and race of Twitter users located in U.S. using advanced image
processing algorithms from Face++. Then, we investigate how different
demographic groups (i.e. male/female, Asian/Black/White) connect with other. We
quantify to what extent one group follow and interact with each other and the
extent to which these connections and interactions reflect in inequalities in
Twitter. Our analysis shows that users identified as White and male tend to
attain higher positions in Twitter, in terms of the number of followers and
number of times in user's lists. We hope our effort can stimulate the
development of new theories of demographic information in the online space.Comment: In Proceedings of the IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Web
Intelligence (WI'17). Leipzig, Germany. August 201
Parameterized Algorithmics for Computational Social Choice: Nine Research Challenges
Computational Social Choice is an interdisciplinary research area involving
Economics, Political Science, and Social Science on the one side, and
Mathematics and Computer Science (including Artificial Intelligence and
Multiagent Systems) on the other side. Typical computational problems studied
in this field include the vulnerability of voting procedures against attacks,
or preference aggregation in multi-agent systems. Parameterized Algorithmics is
a subfield of Theoretical Computer Science seeking to exploit meaningful
problem-specific parameters in order to identify tractable special cases of in
general computationally hard problems. In this paper, we propose nine of our
favorite research challenges concerning the parameterized complexity of
problems appearing in this context
Towards Measuring Adversarial Twitter Interactions against Candidates in the US Midterm Elections
Adversarial interactions against politicians on social media such as Twitter
have significant impact on society. In particular they disrupt substantive
political discussions online, and may discourage people from seeking public
office. In this study, we measure the adversarial interactions against
candidates for the US House of Representatives during the run-up to the 2018 US
general election. We gather a new dataset consisting of 1.7 million tweets
involving candidates, one of the largest corpora focusing on political
discourse. We then develop a new technique for detecting tweets with toxic
content that are directed at any specific candidate.Such technique allows us to
more accurately quantify adversarial interactions towards political candidates.
Further, we introduce an algorithm to induce candidate-specific adversarial
terms to capture more nuanced adversarial interactions that previous techniques
may not consider toxic. Finally, we use these techniques to outline the breadth
of adversarial interactions seen in the election, including offensive
name-calling, threats of violence, posting discrediting information, attacks on
identity, and adversarial message repetition
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