6 results on '"Croitoru, Arie"'
Search Results
2. Bot stamina: examining the influence and staying power of bots in online social networks
- Author
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Schuchard, Ross, Crooks, Andrew T., Stefanidis, Anthony, and Croitoru, Arie
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Bots fired: examining social bot evidence in online mass shooting conversations.
- Author
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Schuchard, Ross, Crooks, Andrew, Stefanidis, Anthony, and Croitoru, Arie
- Subjects
LAS Vegas Strip shooting, Las Vegas, Nev., 2017 ,MASS shootings ,HARVEST festivals ,ONLINE social networks ,SCHOOL shootings ,INFORMATION society ,SOCIAL network analysis ,SOCIAL accounting - Abstract
Mass shootings, like other extreme events, have long garnered public curiosity and, in turn, significant media coverage. The media framing, or topic focus, of mass shooting events typically evolves over time from details of the actual shooting to discussions of potential policy changes (e.g., gun control, mental health). Such media coverage has been historically provided through traditional media sources such as print, television, and radio, but the advent of online social networks (OSNs) has introduced a new platform for accessing, producing, and distributing information about such extreme events. The ease and convenience of OSN usage for information within society's larger growing reliance upon digital technologies introduces potential unforeseen risks. Social bots, or automated software agents, are one such risk, as they can serve to amplify or distort potential narratives associated with extreme events such as mass shootings. In this paper, we seek to determine the prevalence and relative importance of social bots participating in OSN conversations following mass shooting events using an ensemble of quantitative techniques. Specifically, we examine a corpus of more than 46 million tweets produced by 11.7 million unique Twitter accounts within OSN conversations discussing four major mass shooting events: the 2017 Las Vegas concert shooting, the 2017 Sutherland Springs church chooting, the 2018 Parkland School Shooting and the 2018 Santa Fe school shooting. This study's results show that social bots participate in and contribute to online mass shooting conversations in a manner that is distinguishable from human contributions. Furthermore, while social bots accounted for fewer than 1% of total corpus user contributors, social network analysis centrality measures identified many bots with significant prominence in the conversation networks, densely occupying many of the highest eigenvector and out-degree centrality measure rankings, to include 82% of the top-100 eigenvector values of the Las Vegas retweet network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Linking cyber and physical spaces through community detection and clustering in social media feeds.
- Author
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Croitoru, Arie, Wayant, N., Crooks, A., Radzikowski, J., and Stefanidis, A.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL media , *CYBERSPACE , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *HYBRID systems , *INFORMATION theory - Abstract
Over the last decade we have witnessed a significant growth in the use of social media. Interactions within their context lead to the establishment of groups that function at the intersection of the physical and cyber spaces, and as such represent hybrid communities. Gaining a better understanding of how information flows in these hybrid communities is a substantial scientific challenge with significant implications on our ability to better harness crowd-contributed content. This paper addresses this challenge by studying how information propagates and evolves over time at the intersection of the physical and cyber spaces. By analyzing the spatial footprint, social network structure, and content in both physical and cyber spaces we advance our understanding of the information propagation mechanisms in social media. The utility of this approach is demonstrated in two real-world case studies, the first reflecting a planned event (the Occupy Wall Street – OWS – movement’s Day of Action in November 2011), and the second reflecting an unexpected disaster (the Boston Marathon bombing in April 2013). Our findings highlight the intricate nature of the propagation and evolution of information both within and across cyber and physical spaces, as well as the role of hybrid networks in the exchange of information between these spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. International Relations: State-Driven and Citizen-Driven Networks.
- Author
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Crooks, Andrew, Masad, David, Croitoru, Arie, Cotnoir, Amy, Stefanidis, Anthony, and Radzikowski, Jacek
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,SOCIAL network analysis ,SOCIAL media ,QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
The international community can be viewed as a set of networks manifested through various transnational activities. The availability of longitudinal data sets such as international arms trades and United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) allows for the study of state-driven interactions over time. In parallel to this top-down approach, the recent emergence of social media is fostering a bottom-up and citizen-driven avenue for international relations (IRs). The comparison of these two network types offers a new lens to study the alignment between states and their people. This article presents a network-driven approach to analyze communities as they are established through different forms of bottom-up (e.g., Twitter) and top-down (e.g., UNGA voting records and international arms trade records) IRs. By constructing and comparing different network communities, we were able to evaluate the similarities between state-driven and citizen-driven networks. In order to validate our approach we identified communities in UNGA voting records during and after the Cold War. Our approach showed that the similarity between UNGA communities during and after the Cold War was 0.55 and 0.81, respectively (in a 0–1 scale). To explore the state- versus citizen-driven interactions, we focused on the recent events in Syria within Twitter over a sample period of 1 month. The analysis of these data show a clear misalignment (0.25) between citizen-formed international networks and the ones established by the Syrian government (e.g., through its UNGA voting patterns). [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
6. Geosocial gauge: a system prototype for knowledge discovery from social media.
- Author
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Croitoru, Arie, Crooks, Andrew, Radzikowski, Jacek, and Stefanidis, Anthony
- Subjects
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SOCIAL media , *ARCHITECTURE , *ANIMAL feeding , *HARVESTING , *GLEANING - Abstract
The remarkable success of online social media sites marks a shift in the way people connect and share information. Much of this information now contains some form of geographical content because of the proliferation of location-aware devices, thus fostering the emergence ofgeosocialmedia – a new type of user-generated geospatial information. Through geosocial media we are able, for the first time, to observe human activities in scales and resolutions that were so far unavailable. Furthermore, the wide spectrum of social media data and service types provides a multitude of perspectives on real-world activities and happenings, thus opening new frontiers in geosocial knowledge discovery. However, gleaning knowledge from geosocial media is a challenging task, as they tend to be unstructured and thematically diverse. To address these challenges, this article presents a system prototype for harvesting, processing, modeling, and integrating heterogeneous social media feeds towards the generation of geosocial knowledge. Our article addresses primarily two key components of this system prototype: a novel data model for heterogeneous social media feeds and a corresponding general system architecture. We present these key components and demonstrate their implementation in our system prototype, GeoSocial Gauge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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