2022
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2204.04245
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Online Emotions During the Storming of the U.S. Capitol: Evidence from the Social Media Network Parler

Abstract: The storming of the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021 has led to the killing of 5 people and is widely regarded as an attack on democracy. The storming was largely coordinated through social media networks such as Twitter and "Parler". Yet little is known regarding how users interacted on Parler during the storming of the Capitol. In this work, we examine the emotion dynamics on Parler during the storming with regard to heterogeneity across time and users. For this, we segment the user base into different groups… Show more

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“…A more recent, massively disruptive event: the January 6th riots of the U.S. Capitol, has also been the subject of SA studies as it is now known that social media played an instrumental role in the communication and incitation of rioters. In a study by Jakubik et al, over 700,000 posts from the Parler social network produced on the day of the riot were analyzed, detailing the temporal progression of basic and derived emotions such as joy, fear, surprise, disapproval, unbelief, outrage, and guilt [ 43 ]. On another study by Li et al, a number of multimedia sources including videos, tweets, and speeches, were analyzed by means of Granger causality methods [ 44 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A more recent, massively disruptive event: the January 6th riots of the U.S. Capitol, has also been the subject of SA studies as it is now known that social media played an instrumental role in the communication and incitation of rioters. In a study by Jakubik et al, over 700,000 posts from the Parler social network produced on the day of the riot were analyzed, detailing the temporal progression of basic and derived emotions such as joy, fear, surprise, disapproval, unbelief, outrage, and guilt [ 43 ]. On another study by Li et al, a number of multimedia sources including videos, tweets, and speeches, were analyzed by means of Granger causality methods [ 44 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%