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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Computer Sciences

Social media

2020

Singapore Management University

Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Social Media Analytics: A Case Study Of Singapore General Election 2020, Sebastian Zhi Tao Khoo, Leong Hock Ho, Ee Hong Lee, Danston Kheng Boon Goh, Zehao Zhang, Swee Hong Ng, Haodi Qi, Kyong Jin Shim Dec 2020

Social Media Analytics: A Case Study Of Singapore General Election 2020, Sebastian Zhi Tao Khoo, Leong Hock Ho, Ee Hong Lee, Danston Kheng Boon Goh, Zehao Zhang, Swee Hong Ng, Haodi Qi, Kyong Jin Shim

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

The 2020 Singaporean General Election (GE2020) was a general election held in Singapore on July 10, 2020. In this study, we present an analysis on social conversations about GE2020 during the election period. We analyzed social conversations from popular platforms such as Twitter, HardwareZone, and TR Emeritus.


Digital Social Listening On Conversations About Sexual Harassment, Xuesi Sim, Ern Rae Chang, Yu Xiang Ong, Jie Ying Yeo, Christine Bai Shuang Yan, Eugene Wen Jia Choy, Kyong Jin Shim Dec 2020

Digital Social Listening On Conversations About Sexual Harassment, Xuesi Sim, Ern Rae Chang, Yu Xiang Ong, Jie Ying Yeo, Christine Bai Shuang Yan, Eugene Wen Jia Choy, Kyong Jin Shim

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

In light of the #MeToo movement and publicized sexual harassment incidents in Singapore in recent years, we built an analytics pipeline for performing digital social listening on conversations about sexual harassment for AWARE (Association of Women for Action and Research). Our social network analysis results identified key influencers that AWARE can engage for sexual harassment awareness campaigns. Further, our analysis results suggest new hashtags that AWARE can use to run social media campaigns and achieve greater reach.


Leveraging Profanity For Insincere Content Detection: A Neural Network Approach, Swapna Gottipati, Annabel Tan, David Jing Shan Chow, Joel Wee Kiat Lim Nov 2020

Leveraging Profanity For Insincere Content Detection: A Neural Network Approach, Swapna Gottipati, Annabel Tan, David Jing Shan Chow, Joel Wee Kiat Lim

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

Community driven social media sites are rich sources of knowledge and entertainment and at the same vulnerable to the flames or toxic content that can be dangerous to various users of these platforms as well as to the society. Therefore, it is crucial to identify and remove such content to have a better and safe online experience. Manually eliminating flames is tedious and hence many research works focus on machine learning or deep learning models for automated methods. In this paper, we primarily focus on detecting the insincere content using neural network-based learning methods. We also integrated the profanity features …


An Attention-Based Rumor Detection Model With Tree-Structured Recursive Neural Networks, Jing Ma, Wei Gao, Shafiq Joty, Kam-Fai Wong Aug 2020

An Attention-Based Rumor Detection Model With Tree-Structured Recursive Neural Networks, Jing Ma, Wei Gao, Shafiq Joty, Kam-Fai Wong

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

Rumor spread in social media severely jeopardizes the credibility of online content. Thus, automatic debunking of rumors is of great importance to keep social media a healthy environment. While facing a dubious claim, people often dispute its truthfulness sporadically in their posts containing various cues, which can form useful evidence with long-distance dependencies. In this work, we propose to learn discriminative features from microblog posts by following their non-sequential propagation structure and generate more powerful representations for identifying rumors. For modeling non-sequential structure, we first represent the diffusion of microblog posts with propagation trees, which provide valuable clues on how …


Detecting Fake News In Social Media: An Asia-Pacific Perspective, Meeyoung Cha, Wei Gao, Cheng-Te Li Mar 2020

Detecting Fake News In Social Media: An Asia-Pacific Perspective, Meeyoung Cha, Wei Gao, Cheng-Te Li

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

In March 2011, the catastrophic accident known as "The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster" took place, initiated by the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. The only nuclear accident to receive a Level-7 classification on the International Nuclear Event Scale since the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster in 1986, the Fukushima event triggered global concerns and rumors regarding radiation leaks. Among the false rumors was an image, which had been described as a map of radioactive discharge emanating into the Pacific Ocean, as illustrated in the accompanying figure. In fact, this figure, depicting the wave height of the tsunami that followed, …


Interpretable Rumor Detection In Microblogs By Attending To User Interactions, Ling Min Serena Khoo, Hai Leong Chieu, Zhong Qian, Jing Jiang Feb 2020

Interpretable Rumor Detection In Microblogs By Attending To User Interactions, Ling Min Serena Khoo, Hai Leong Chieu, Zhong Qian, Jing Jiang

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

We address rumor detection by learning to differentiate between the community’s response to real and fake claims in microblogs. Existing state-of-the-art models are based on tree models that model conversational trees. However, in social media, a user posting a reply might be replying to the entire thread rather than to a specific user. We propose a post-level attention model (PLAN) to model long distance interactions between tweets with the multi-head attention mechanism in a transformer network. We investigated variants of this model: (1) a structure aware self-attention model (StA-PLAN) that incorporates tree structure information in the transformer network, and (2) …


Optimal Feature Selection For Learning-Based Algorithms For Sentiment Classification, Zhaoxia Wang, Zhiping Lin Jan 2020

Optimal Feature Selection For Learning-Based Algorithms For Sentiment Classification, Zhaoxia Wang, Zhiping Lin

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

Sentiment classification is an important branch of cognitive computation—thus the further studies of properties of sentiment analysis is important. Sentiment classification on text data has been an active topic for the last two decades and learning-based methods are very popular and widely used in various applications. For learning-based methods, a lot of enhanced technical strategies have been used to improve the performance of the methods. Feature selection is one of these strategies and it has been studied by many researchers. However, an existing unsolved difficult problem is the choice of a suitable number of features for obtaining the best sentiment …