Community Interaction and Conflict on the Web

March 09, 2018 ยท Entered Twilight ยท ๐Ÿ› The Web Conference

๐ŸŒ… TWILIGHT: Old Age
Predates the code-sharing era โ€” a pioneer of its time

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Repo contents: .gitignore, LICENSE.txt, README.md, constants.py, embeddings.py, nonneural_models.ipynb, requirements.txt, social_lstm_model.py

Authors Srijan Kumar, William L. Hamilton, Jure Leskovec, Dan Jurafsky arXiv ID 1803.03697 Category cs.SI: Social & Info Networks Cross-listed cs.CL, cs.HC Citations 380 Venue The Web Conference Repository https://github.com/williamleif/social-lstm โญ 163 Last Checked 1 month ago
Abstract
Users organize themselves into communities on web platforms. These communities can interact with one another, often leading to conflicts and toxic interactions. However, little is known about the mechanisms of interactions between communities and how they impact users. Here we study intercommunity interactions across 36,000 communities on Reddit, examining cases where users of one community are mobilized by negative sentiment to comment in another community. We show that such conflicts tend to be initiated by a handful of communities---less than 1% of communities start 74% of conflicts. While conflicts tend to be initiated by highly active community members, they are carried out by significantly less active members. We find that conflicts are marked by formation of echo chambers, where users primarily talk to other users from their own community. In the long-term, conflicts have adverse effects and reduce the overall activity of users in the targeted communities. Our analysis of user interactions also suggests strategies for mitigating the negative impact of conflicts---such as increasing direct engagement between attackers and defenders. Further, we accurately predict whether a conflict will occur by creating a novel LSTM model that combines graph embeddings, user, community, and text features. This model can be used toreate early-warning systems for community moderators to prevent conflicts. Altogether, this work presents a data-driven view of community interactions and conflict, and paves the way towards healthier online communities.
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