Authors
Derek O'Callaghan, Nico Prucha, Derek Greene, Maura Conway, Joe Carthy, Pádraig Cunningham
Publication date
2014/8/20
Conference
Proc. 2014 International Conference on Advances in Social Network Analysis and Mining (ASONAM 2014)
Description
The Syria conflict has been described as the most socially mediated in history, with online social media playing a particularly important role. At the same time, the ever-changing landscape of the conflict leads to difficulties in applying analytical approaches taken by other studies of online political activism. Therefore, in this paper, we use an approach that does not require strong prior assumptions or the proposal of an advance hypothesis to analyze Twitter and YouTube activity of a range of protagonists to the conflict, in an attempt to reveal additional insights into the relationships between them. By means of a network representation that combines multiple data views, we uncover communities of accounts falling into four categories that broadly reflect the situation on the ground in Syria. A detailed analysis of selected communities within the anti-regime categories is provided, focusing on their central actors, preferred …
Total citations
2014201520162017201820192020202120222023202419496848234
Scholar articles
D O'Callaghan, N Prucha, D Greene, M Conway… - 2014 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances …, 2014