论文标题
量化可恶的社区如何激发在线用户
Quantifying How Hateful Communities Radicalize Online Users
论文作者
论文摘要
虽然在线社交媒体提供了一种忽略或窒息的声音的方式,但它还使用户可以平台传播可恶的言论。这种讲话通常起源于边缘社区,但它可以溢出到主流渠道中。在本文中,我们衡量了加入边缘仇恨社区的影响,以仇恨言论传播到社交网络的其余部分。我们利用Reddit的数据来评估加入一种回声室的效果:一个志趣相投的用户,表现出仇恨行为的数字社区。我们在成为积极参与者之前和之后衡量成员在研究社区之外的仇恨言论的用法。我们将中断的时间序列(ITS)分析作为因果推理方法,我们评估了溢出效应,其中某个社区内的可恨语言可以通过使用社区外的仇恨单词使用水平来传播该社区之外的效果,以作为学识渊博的仇恨的代理。我们研究了涵盖三个仇恨言论领域的四个不同的Reddit子社区(子红):种族主义,厌女症和脂肪欺骗。在所有三种情况下,我们都会发现在原始社区之外的仇恨言论增加,这意味着加入此类社区会导致仇恨言论在整个平台中传播。此外,在最初加入社区后的几个月中,发现用户可以在几个月内接听这种新的仇恨演讲。我们表明,有害的言论不保留在社区中。我们的结果提供了回声室有害影响的新证据,以及调节它们以减少仇恨言论的潜在好处。
While online social media offers a way for ignored or stifled voices to be heard, it also allows users a platform to spread hateful speech. Such speech usually originates in fringe communities, yet it can spill over into mainstream channels. In this paper, we measure the impact of joining fringe hateful communities in terms of hate speech propagated to the rest of the social network. We leverage data from Reddit to assess the effect of joining one type of echo chamber: a digital community of like-minded users exhibiting hateful behavior. We measure members' usage of hate speech outside the studied community before and after they become active participants. Using Interrupted Time Series (ITS) analysis as a causal inference method, we gauge the spillover effect, in which hateful language from within a certain community can spread outside that community by using the level of out-of-community hate word usage as a proxy for learned hate. We investigate four different Reddit sub-communities (subreddits) covering three areas of hate speech: racism, misogyny and fat-shaming. In all three cases we find an increase in hate speech outside the originating community, implying that joining such community leads to a spread of hate speech throughout the platform. Moreover, users are found to pick up this new hateful speech for months after initially joining the community. We show that the harmful speech does not remain contained within the community. Our results provide new evidence of the harmful effects of echo chambers and the potential benefit of moderating them to reduce adoption of hateful speech.