论文标题

关于COVID-19的在线讨论中的政治党派和反科学态度

Political Partisanship and Anti-Science Attitudes in Online Discussions about Covid-19

论文作者

Rao, Ashwin, Morstatter, Fred, Hu, Minda, Chen, Emily, Burghardt, Keith, Ferrara, Emilio, Lerman, Kristina

论文摘要

小说的冠状病毒大流行继续破坏美国各地的社区。意见调查确定了政治意识形态在塑造大流行和遵守预防措施的看法中的重要性。在这里,我们使用社交媒体数据来研究极化的复杂性。我们分析了与2020年1月至5月之间收集的大流行有关的大型推文数据集,并开发了将用户沿温和派(Hardline vs中度),政治与保守派和科学(反科学与科学与科学)维度分类的方法来对用户的意识形态保持进行分类。尽管沿科学和政治方面的两极分化是相关的,但政治上适中的用户更有可能与亲科学的观点保持一致,并且具有反科学观点的政治硬线用户。与期望相反,我们没有发现两极分化会随着时间的流逝而增长。取而代之的是,我们看到适度的亲科学用户的活动不断增加。我们还表明,反科学保守派倾向于从美国南部发推文,而反科学则来自西方国家。我们的发现阐明了两极分化的多维性质,以及通过社交媒体数据在跨时空跟踪大流行的两极分化观点的可行性。

The novel coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage communities across the US. Opinion surveys identified importance of political ideology in shaping perceptions of the pandemic and compliance with preventive measures. Here, we use social media data to study complexity of polarization. We analyze a large dataset of tweets related to the pandemic collected between January and May of 2020, and develop methods to classify the ideological alignment of users along the moderacy (hardline vs moderate), political (liberal vs conservative) and science (anti-science vs pro-science) dimensions. While polarization along the science and political dimensions are correlated, politically moderate users are more likely to be aligned with the pro-science views, and politically hardline users with anti-science views. Contrary to expectations, we do not find that polarization grows over time; instead, we see increasing activity by moderate pro-science users. We also show that anti-science conservatives tend to tweet from the Southern US, while anti-science moderates from the Western states. Our findings shed light on the multi-dimensional nature of polarization, and the feasibility of tracking polarized opinions about the pandemic across time and space through social media data.

扫码加入交流群

加入微信交流群

微信交流群二维码

扫码加入学术交流群,获取更多资源