Publication | Open Access
Tents, Tweets, and Events: The Interplay Between Ongoing Protests and Social Media
168
Citations
51
References
2015
Year
Social Medium MonitoringPolitical BehaviorCommunicationProtest StudiesSocial SciencesJournalismActivismSocial MediaSocial Medium NewsPolitical CommunicationSocial Medium MiningCivic EngagementGranger CausalitySocial Media StreamsSocial MovementsSocial ComputingSocial Medium DataArtsPolitical Science
Recent protests have fuelled deliberations about the extent to which social media ignites popular uprisings. In this article, we use time-series data of Twitter, Facebook, and onsite protests to assess the Granger causality between social media streams and onsite developments at the Indignados, Occupy, and Brazilian Vinegar protests. After applying Gaussianization to the data, we found contentious communication on Twitter and Facebook forecasted onsite protest during the Indignados and Occupy protests, with bidirectional Granger causality between online and onsite protest in the Occupy series. Conversely, the Vinegar demonstrations presented Granger causality between Facebook and Twitter communication, and separately between protestors and injuries/arrests onsite. We conclude that the effective forecasting of protest activity likely varies across different instances of political unrest.
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