What we write about when we write about causality


Date
Aug 22, 2016 12:00 AM
Event
International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining
Location
San Francisco, CA

Identifying and communicating relationships between causes and effects is important for understanding our world, but is affected by language structure, cognitive and emotional biases, and the properties of the communication medium. Despite the increasing importance of social media, much remains unknown about causal statements made online. To study real-world causal attribution, we extract a large-scale corpus of causal statements made on the Twitter social network platform as well as a comparable random control corpus. We compare causal and control statements using statistical language and sentiment analysis tools. We find that causal statements have a number of significant lexical and grammatical differences compared with controls and tend to be more negative in sentiment than controls. Causal statements made online tend to focus on news and current events, medicine and health, or interpersonal relationships, as shown by topic models. By quantifying the features and potential biases of causality communication, this study improves our understanding of the accuracy of information and opinions found online.

tom mcandrew
tom mcandrew
Assistant Professor

I am a computational scientist with a methodological focus on developing ensemble forecasting algorithms and extracting statistical information from unstructured human judgment data. The areas of application that interest me most are building tools to combine forecasting and predictive models in the health sciences.

Related