Credibility of climate change denial in social media

被引:0
|
作者
Abhishek Samantray
Paolo Pin
机构
[1] IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca,Department of Economics and Statistics
[2] University of Siena,BIDSA and IGIER
[3] Bocconi University,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Public perception about the reality of climate change has remained polarized and propagation of fake information on social media can be a potential cause. Homophily in communication, the tendency of people to communicate with others having similar beliefs, is understood to lead to the formation of echo chambers which reinforce individual beliefs and fuel further increase in polarization. Quite surprisingly, in an empirical analysis of the effect of homophily in communication on the level of polarization using evidence from Twitter conversations on the climate change topic during 2007–2017, we find that evolution of homophily over time negatively affects the evolution of polarization in the long run. Among various information about climate change to which people are exposed to, they are more likely to be influenced by information that have higher credibility. Therefore, we study a model of polarization of beliefs in social networks that accounts for credibility of propagating information in addition to homophily in communication. We find that polarization can not increase with increase in homophily in communication unless information propagating fake beliefs has minimal credibility. We therefore infer from the empirical results that anti-climate change tweets are largely not credible.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] On Social Media, Solidarity, and the Catastrophe of Climate Change
    Couldry, Nick
    SOCIAL MEDIA + SOCIETY, 2023, 9 (02):
  • [22] Media Discourse and Social Representations on Climate Change
    Pinuel Raigada, Jose Luis
    REDES COM-REVISTA DE ESTUDIOS PARA EL DESARROLLO SOCIAL DE LA COMUNICACION, 2016, (13): : 24 - 29
  • [23] Visual Analytics - Climate Change in Social Media
    Kokoschka, Vanessa
    Secco, Cristian A.
    Nazemi, Kawa
    2024 28TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE INFORMATION VISUALISATION, IV 2024, 2024, : 167 - 173
  • [24] Social media engagement in people and climate change
    Hilary Graham
    Su Golder
    npj Climate Action, 3 (1):
  • [25] Visual Analytics - Climate Change in Social Media
    Kokoschka, Vanessa
    Secco, Cristian A.
    Nazemi, Kawa
    Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Visualisation, 2024, : 167 - 173
  • [26] Climate Change Advocacy and Engagement on Social Media
    Hart, P. Sol
    Feldman, Lauren
    Choi, Soobin
    Chinn, Sedona
    Hiaeshutter-Rice, Dan
    SCIENCE COMMUNICATION, 2024,
  • [27] The credibility of social media in journalism
    Curiel, Eva Herrero
    TRANSINFORMACAO, 2015, 27 (02): : 165 - 171
  • [28] Future of denial: the ideologies of climate change
    Rapp, Hilde
    DeLay, Tad
    INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2025, 101 (02) : 734 - 735
  • [29] Climate Change Skepticism and Denial: An Introduction
    Dunlap, Riley E.
    AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 2013, 57 (06) : 691 - 698
  • [30] Climate change: beyond denial and grief
    Launer, John
    POSTGRADUATE MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2019, 95 (1119) : 59 - 60