2023
DOI: 10.1007/s41109-022-00526-3
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A combined synchronization index for evaluating collective action social media

Abstract: Social media has provided a citizen voice, giving rise to grassroots collective action, where users deploy a concerted effort to disseminate online narratives and even carry out offline protests. Sometimes these collective action are aided by inorganic synchronization, which arise from bot actors. It is thus important to identify the synchronicity of emerging discourse on social media and the indications of organic/inorganic activity within the conversations. This provides a way of profiling an event for possi… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…We use URLs as an indicator of synchronization as compared to other tweet artifacts (e.g., hashtag) because URLs show deliberate information referral coordination by pointing to specific pages (Ng and Carley, 2023b ). After which, we construct a network graph that represents the URL synchrony.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We use URLs as an indicator of synchronization as compared to other tweet artifacts (e.g., hashtag) because URLs show deliberate information referral coordination by pointing to specific pages (Ng and Carley, 2023b ). After which, we construct a network graph that represents the URL synchrony.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, within online protests, bots have been known to be vocal in calling for action: voicing out against the alcoholic beverage act in Indonesia (Danaditya et al, 2022 ), calling for volunteers to stand up against corruption in Latin America (Savage et al, 2016 ), and supporting climate change activism (Chen et al, 2021 ). The examination of the presence and extent of bot accounts provides a differentiation between the inorganic and organic portions of the discourse, in terms of structure and narratives (Tardelli et al, 2022 ; Ng and Carley, 2023b ), which is helpful in determining the potential violence that might result from the cacophony of information dissemination.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In literature, a variety of threshold values have been set, ranging from 0.25 [48] to 0.50 [49] to 0.76 [50]. We adopted the 0.70 value to threshold the likelihood score for marking social media bots to be in consistent with some past work that have used the same algorithm [5,33]: a user with a score above or equal to 0.70 is deemed as a bot and an account below that value is deemed as a human [37]. We denote the likelihood score as P(bot).…”
Section: Figure 1 Overview Of Methodology For Identifying Types Of Botsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Online political participation by individual users can provide an indication on the perception of political discussions. As individual users share their opinions on global affairs, diplomatic agents can systematically collect these information for campaign analysis [4,5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%