posted on 2022-08-17, 13:15authored byDavid J.P. O'Sullivan, Guillermo Garduño-Hernández, James P. Gleeson, Mariano Beguerisse-Díaz
We examine the relationship between social structure and sentiment through the analysis of a large collection of tweets about the Irish Marriage Referendum of 2015. We obtain the
sentiment of every tweet with the hashtags #marref and #marriageref that was posted in the days leading to the referendum, and construct networks to aggregate sentiment
and use it to study the interactions among users. Our analysis shows that the sentiment of outgoing mention tweets is correlated with the sentiment of incoming mentions, and there are significantly more connections between users with similar sentiment scores than among users with opposite scores in the mention and follower networks. We combine the community structure of the follower and mention networks with the activity level of the users and sentiment scores to find groups that support voting ‘yes’ or ‘no’ in the referendum. There were numerous conversations between users on opposing sides
of the debate in the absence of follower connections, which suggests that there were efforts by some users to establish dialogue and debate across ideological divisions. Our analysis shows that social structure can be integrated successfully with sentiment to analyse and understand the disposition of social media users around controversial or polarizing issues. These results have potential applications in the integration of data and
metadata to study opinion dynamics, public opinion modelling and polling.
History
Publication
Royal Society Open Science;4:170154
Publisher
The Royal Society
Note
peer-reviewed
Other Funding information
SFI, Oxford-Emirates Data Science Lab, James S. McDonnell Foundation