New Paper: "Salience vs. Commitment: Dynamics of Political Hashtags in Russian Twitter"
The Berkman Center is pleased to announce the next publication in its
series on the
Russian Internet:
“Salience vs. Commitment: Dynamics of Political Hashtags in Russian
Twitter”
By Vladimir Barash and John Kelly
Building off our recent mapping of Russian Twitter, in this
paper we analyze the dynamics of political hashtags representing a range
of political issues and big news stories--from terrorist bombings, to
pro-government issues, to topics preferred by the opposition. This work
was made possible thanks to the generous support of the John D. &
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
Social media sites like Twitter enable users to engage in the spread of
contagious phenomena: everything from information and rumors to social
movements and virally marketed products. In particular, Twitter has been
observed to function as a platform for political discourse, allowing
political movements to spread their message and engage supporters, and
also as a platform for information diffusion, allowing everyone from
mass media to citizens to reach a wide audience with a critical piece of
news. Previous work suggests that different contagious phenomena will
display distinct propagation dynamics, and in particular that news will
spread differently through a population than other phenomena. We
leverage this theory to construct a system for classifying contagious
phenomena based on the properties of their propagation dynamics, by
combining temporal and network features. Our system, applicable to
phenomena in any social media platform or genre, is applied to a dataset
of news-related and political hashtags diffusing through the population
of Russian Twitter users. Our results show that news-related hashtags
have a distinctive pattern of propagation across the spectrum of Russian
Twitter users. In contrast, we find that political hashtags display a
number of different dynamic signatures corresponding to different
politically active sub-communities. Analysis using ‘chronotopes’
sharpens these findings and reveals an important propagation pattern we
call ‘resonant salience.’
This is the fourth in a series of papers that will be released over the
coming months. Previous research on the Russian Internet include our
baseline network analysis of Russian Twitter, "Mapping Russian Twitter," our study
of the Russian blogosphere, "Public Discourse in the Russian
Blogosphere: Mapping RuNet Politics and Mobilization"
and “Exploring Russian Cyberspace: Digitally-Mediated Collective Action
and the Networked Public Sphere.”
An overview of past and upcoming publications can be found here: http://cyber.harvard.edu/research/russia/paper_series. For further
information about the Berkman Center's project on the Impact of the
Internet on Russian Politics, Media, and Society please visit: http://cyber.harvard.edu/research/russia.
As always, we welcome your feedback.