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Title The Influence of Interdependence in Networked Publics Spheres: How Community-Level Interactions Affect the Evolution of Topics in Online Discourse
Authors Aimei Yang, Ian Myoungsu Choi, Andrés Abeliuk, Adam Saffer
Publication date May 2021
Abstract Investigations of networked public spheres often examine
the
structures of online platforms by studying users' interactions. These
works suggest that users' interactions can lead to cyberbalkanization when
interlocutors form homophilous communities that typically have few
connections to others with opposing ideologies. Yet, rather than assuming
communities are isolated, this study examines community-level interactions
to reveal how communities in online discourses are more interdependent than
previously theorized. Specifically, we examine how such interactions
influence the evolution of topics overtime in source and target communities.
Our analysis found that (a) the size of a source community (the community
that initiates interactions) and a target community (the community that
receives interactions), (b) the stability of the source community, and (c)
the volume of mentions from a source community to a target community
predicts the level of influence one community has on another's discussion
topics. We argue this has significant theoretical and practical
implications.
Pages 148-166
Volume 26
Journal name Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication
Publisher Oxford University Press (Oxford, UK)
Reference URL View reference page