Understanding the Diverging User Trajectories in Highly-related Online Communities during the COVID-19 Pandemic
As the COVID-19 pandemic is disrupting life worldwide, related online communities are popping up. In particular, two "new" communities, /r/China flu and /r/Coronavirus, emerged on Reddit and have been dedicated to COVID- related discussions from the very beginning of this pandemic. With /r...
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Zusammenfassung: | As the COVID-19 pandemic is disrupting life worldwide, related online
communities are popping up. In particular, two "new" communities, /r/China flu
and /r/Coronavirus, emerged on Reddit and have been dedicated to COVID- related
discussions from the very beginning of this pandemic. With /r/Coronavirus
promoted as the official community on Reddit, it remains an open question how
users choose between these two highly-related communities.
In this paper, we characterize user trajectories in these two communities
from the beginning of COVID-19 to the end of September 2020. We show that new
users of /r/China flu and /r/Coronavirus were similar from January to March.
After that, their differences steadily increase, evidenced by both language
distance and membership prediction, as the pandemic continues to unfold.
Furthermore, users who started at /r/China flu from January to March were more
likely to leave, while those who started in later months tend to remain highly
"loyal". To understand this difference, we develop a movement analysis
framework to understand membership changes in these two communities and
identify a significant proportion of /r/China flu members (around 50%) that
moved to /r/Coronavirus in February. This movement turns out to be highly
predictable based on other subreddits that users were previously active in. Our
work demonstrates how two highly-related communities emerge and develop their
own identity in a crisis, and highlights the important role of existing
communities in understanding such an emergence. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2006.04816 |