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Content-based features predict social media influence operations.
Alizadeh, Meysam; Shapiro, Jacob N; Buntain, Cody; Tucker, Joshua A.
Afiliação
  • Alizadeh M; School of Public and International Affairs and Department of Politics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA.
  • Shapiro JN; School of Public and International Affairs and Department of Politics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA.
  • Buntain C; Department of Informatics, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, NJ 07102, USA.
  • Tucker JA; Department of Politics and Center for Social Media and Politics, New York University, New York, NY 10012, USA.
Sci Adv ; 6(30): eabb5824, 2020 07.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32832674
ABSTRACT
We study how easy it is to distinguish influence operations from organic social media activity by assessing the performance of a platform-agnostic machine learning approach. Our method uses public activity to detect content that is part of coordinated influence operations based on human-interpretable features derived solely from content. We test this method on publicly available Twitter data on Chinese, Russian, and Venezuelan troll activity targeting the United States, as well as the Reddit dataset of Russian influence efforts. To assess how well content-based features distinguish these influence operations from random samples of general and political American users, we train and test classifiers on a monthly basis for each campaign across five prediction tasks. Content-based features perform well across period, country, platform, and prediction task. Industrialized production of influence campaign content leaves a distinctive signal in user-generated content that allows tracking of campaigns from month to month and across different accounts.

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Article