论文标题
调查基于重置计的社会机器人研究的有效性
Investigating the Validity of Botometer-based Social Bot Studies
论文作者
论文摘要
近年来,众多社交机器人居住着像Twitter这样的社交媒体平台的想法。假定社交机器人是由恶意演员经营的自动社交媒体帐户,其目的是操纵公众舆论。他们认为能够自主生产内容并与人类用户互动。在许多不同的政治背景下,包括美国总统选举,关于移民,气候变化和COVID-19的讨论,包括社会机器人活动。但是,相关出版物要么使用粗略和可疑的启发式方法来区分所谓的社交机器人和人类,或者在绝大多数情况下 - 完全依赖于自动机器人检测工具的输出,最常见的是机器人。在本文中,我们指出了广泛使用的研究设计中的基本理论缺陷,用于估计社会机器人的流行。此外,我们通过仔细地和系统地检查数百个被视为社会机器人的帐户,从经验上研究了同行评审的基于Bototer的研究的有效性。我们找不到一个社交机器人。取而代之的是,我们发现大多数人毫无疑问是由人类用户运营的,其中绝大多数以不起眼且不明显的方式使用Twitter,而没有丝毫自动化的痕迹。我们得出的结论是,声称要调查基于BOTOMETOR的社会机器人的普遍性,特性或影响的研究实际上只是研究了这种方法的假阳性和伪像。
The idea that social media platforms like Twitter are inhabited by vast numbers of social bots has become widely accepted in recent years. Social bots are assumed to be automated social media accounts operated by malicious actors with the goal of manipulating public opinion. They are credited with the ability to produce content autonomously and to interact with human users. Social bot activity has been reported in many different political contexts, including the U.S. presidential elections, discussions about migration, climate change, and COVID-19. However, the relevant publications either use crude and questionable heuristics to discriminate between supposed social bots and humans or -- in the vast majority of the cases -- fully rely on the output of automatic bot detection tools, most commonly Botometer. In this paper, we point out a fundamental theoretical flaw in the widely-used study design for estimating the prevalence of social bots. Furthermore, we empirically investigate the validity of peer-reviewed Botometer-based studies by closely and systematically inspecting hundreds of accounts that had been counted as social bots. We were unable to find a single social bot. Instead, we found mostly accounts undoubtedly operated by human users, the vast majority of them using Twitter in an inconspicuous and unremarkable fashion without the slightest traces of automation. We conclude that studies claiming to investigate the prevalence, properties, or influence of social bots based on Botometer have, in reality, just investigated false positives and artifacts of this approach.