论文标题

在线讨论中的团体威胁,政治末端和集体动态

Group Threat, Political Extremity, and Collective Dynamics in Online Discussions

论文作者

Turbic, N. Gizem Bacaksizlar, Galesic, Mirta

论文摘要

集体将其网络结构适应他们面临的挑战。据推测,经历了来自外部群体的真实或想象中的威胁的集体倾向于巩固一些有影响力的群体成员的背后,而在政治上极端的群体中,几个成员具有很大影响力的网络结构更有可能。这些假设尚未在大型现实世界中进行测试。我们重建了成千上万的评论员参加的网络,这些网络参与了备受瞩目的美国政治新闻网站,这些网站从左到右,包括琼斯母亲,大西洋,山丘,山和布雷特巴特。我们研究了评论员网络中影响力不平等的不同指数与与重大社会事件相关的群体威胁,从选举和政治集会到大规模枪击事件之间的关系。我们的发现支持了面临现实或想象中的外部威胁的团体和更政治上极端的团体更有可能包括影响不成比例的评论者。这些结果提供了对集体适应外部威胁的理论叙述的广泛现实测试。

Collectives adapt their network structure to the challenges they face. It has been hypothesized that collectives experiencing a real or imagined threat from an outgroup tend to consolidate behind a few influential group members, and that network structures in which a few members have a very strong influence are more likely in politically extreme groups. These hypotheses have not been tested in large-scale real-world settings. We reconstruct networks of tens of thousands of commenters participating in comment sections of high-profile U.S. political news websites spanning the political spectrum from left to right, including Mother Jones, The Atlantic, The Hill, and Breitbart. We investigate the relationship between different indices of inequality of influence in commenters' networks and perceived group threat associated with significant societal events, from elections and political rallies to mass shootings. Our findings support the hypotheses that groups facing a real or imagined outgroup threat and groups that are more politically extreme are more likely to include disproportionately influential commenters. These results provide an extensive real-world test of theoretical accounts of collective adaptation to outgroup threats.

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