论文标题
关于REDDIT的意见变化与信息消耗之间的关系
On the Relation Between Opinion Change and Information Consumption on Reddit
论文作者
论文摘要
尽管已经大量关注了意见变化的原因,但对其后果的了解知之甚少。我们的研究阐明了一个用户的意见变化情节与随后在线社交媒体Reddit上的行为变化之间的关系。尤其是,我们研究了R/ChangemyView,这是一个致力于辩论自己意见的在线社区。有趣的是,该论坛采用了一个编码良好的架构,以明确自我报告的意见变化。从这个基础真理开始,我们分析了未来的在线信息消费行为的变化,这是在自我报告的对社会政治话题的意见变化之后产生的。特别是,在这项工作中被运营为社会政治亚军的参与。这种参与概况很重要,因为它代表了一个人的信息饮食,并且是政治隶属关系或健康选择的可靠代理。 我们发现,报告意见变化的人更有可能改变他们未来在特定在线社区的子集中的参与。我们表明,在观点变化后,更有可能放弃哪些社区,并在社区中使用的类似宣传语言和离开它的机会增加之间存在着重要的关联(r = 0.46)。我们发现相反方向的可比结果(r = 0.39),即加入社区。这一发现表明,宣传社区是如何将其内部化的第一个门所内部化的门户。最后,我们表明与意见变化相关的讨论的文本内容表明,哪些社区将受到参与变化的影响。实际上,仅基于意见变化帖子的预测模型能够用0.20的AP@5来指出这些社区,类似于使用过去的所有参与社区的历史可以达到的目标。
While much attention has been devoted to the causes of opinion change, little is known about its consequences. Our study sheds a light on the relationship between one user's opinion change episode and subsequent behavioral change on an online social media, Reddit. In particular, we look at r/ChangeMyView, an online community dedicated to debating one's own opinions. Interestingly, this forum adopts a well-codified schema for explicitly self-reporting opinion change. Starting from this ground truth, we analyze changes in future online information consumption behavior that arise after a self-reported opinion change on sociopolitical topics; and in particular, operationalized in this work as the participation to sociopolitical subreddits. Such participation profile is important as it represents one's information diet, and is a reliable proxy for, e.g., political affiliation or health choices. We find that people who report an opinion change are significantly more likely to change their future participation in a specific subset of online communities. We characterize which communities are more likely to be abandoned after opinion change, and find a significant association (r=0.46) between propaganda-like language used in a community and the increase in chances of leaving it. We find comparable results (r=0.39) for the opposite direction, i.e., joining a community. This finding suggests how propagandistic communities act as a first gateway to internalize a shift in one's sociopolitical opinion. Finally, we show that the textual content of the discussion associated with opinion change is indicative of which communities are going to be subject to a participation change. In fact, a predictive model based only on the opinion change post is able to pinpoint these communities with an AP@5 of 0.20, similar to what can be reached by using all the past history of participation in communities.