Polarized Communities in Online Social Networks
English

About The Book

Increasingly people around the globe use Social Media (SM) - e.g. Facebook Twitter Tumblr Flickr Youtube - to publish multimedia content (posting) to share it (retweeting reblogging or sharing) to reinforce it or not (liking disliking) and to discuss (through messages and comments) in order to be in contact with other users and to get informed about topics of interest. The world population is ≈ 7.4 billion people among them ≈ 2.3 billion (31%) are active social media users (Global Web Index data Jan 2016). Online Social Networks (OSNs) then provide a space for user aggregation in groups expressing opinions accessing information contributing to public debates and participating in the formation of belief systems. In this context communities are built around different topics of interaction and polarized sub-groups often emerge by clustering different opinions and points of view. Such polarized sub-groups can be tracked and monitored over time in an automatic way and the analysis of their interactions is interesting to shed light on the human social behavior.
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