Publication | Closed Access
The liberal media and right-wing conspiracies
29
Citations
24
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
Fake NewsLiberal MediaHypertext DocumentsPolitical BehaviorCorpus LinguisticsMedia StudiesText MiningNatural Language ProcessingComputational Social SciencePolitical SciencePolitical CommunicationLanguage StudiesNews SemanticsContent AnalysisCultural OrientationOnline EntitiesSocial Medium DataArtsLinguisticsOpinion Aggregation
This paper introduces a simple method for estimating cultural orientation, the affiliation of online entities in a polarized field of discourse. In particular, cocitation information is used to estimate the political orientation of hypertext documents. A type of cultural orientation, the political orientation of a document is the degree to which it participates in traditionally left- or right-wing beliefs. Estimating documents' political orientation is of interest for personalized information retrieval and recommender systems. In its application to politics, the method uses a simple probabilistic model to estimate the strength of association between a document and left- and right-wing communities. The model estimates the likelihood of cocitation between a document of interest and a small number of documents of known orientation. The model is tested on three sets of data, 695 partisan web documents, 162 political weblogs, and 72 non-partisan documents. Accuracy above 90% is obtained from the cocitation model, outperforming lexically based classifiers at statistically significant levels.
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