Quantifying Public Response towards Islam on Twitter after Paris Attacks
The Paris terrorist attacks occurred on November 13, 2015 prompted a massive response on social media including Twitter, with millions of posted tweets in the first few hours after the attacks. Most of the tweets were condemning the attacks and showing support to Parisians. One of the trending debat...
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description | The Paris terrorist attacks occurred on November 13, 2015 prompted a massive response on social media including Twitter, with millions of posted tweets in the first few hours after the attacks. Most of the tweets were condemning the attacks and showing support to Parisians. One of the trending debates related to the attacks concerned possible association between terrorism and Islam and Muslims in general. This created a global discussion between those attacking and those defending Islam and Muslims. In this paper, we provide quantitative and qualitative analysis of data collection we streamed from Twitter starting 7 hours after the Paris attacks and for 50 subsequent hours that are related to blaming Islam and Muslims and to defending them. We collected a set of 8.36 million tweets in this epoch consisting of tweets in many different of languages. We could identify a subset consisting of 900K tweets relating to Islam and Muslims. Using sampling methods and crowd-sourcing annotation, we managed to estimate the public response of these tweets. Our findings show that the majority of the tweets were in fact defending Muslims and absolving them from responsibility for the attacks. However, a considerable number of tweets were blaming Muslims, with most of these tweets coming from western countries such as the Netherlands, France, and the US. |
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Most of the tweets were condemning the attacks and showing support to Parisians. One of the trending debates related to the attacks concerned possible association between terrorism and Islam and Muslims in general. This created a global discussion between those attacking and those defending Islam and Muslims. In this paper, we provide quantitative and qualitative analysis of data collection we streamed from Twitter starting 7 hours after the Paris attacks and for 50 subsequent hours that are related to blaming Islam and Muslims and to defending them. We collected a set of 8.36 million tweets in this epoch consisting of tweets in many different of languages. We could identify a subset consisting of 900K tweets relating to Islam and Muslims. Using sampling methods and crowd-sourcing annotation, we managed to estimate the public response of these tweets. Our findings show that the majority of the tweets were in fact defending Muslims and absolving them from responsibility for the attacks. However, a considerable number of tweets were blaming Muslims, with most of these tweets coming from western countries such as the Netherlands, France, and the US.</description><identifier>EISSN: 2331-8422</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Ithaca: Cornell University Library, arXiv.org</publisher><subject>Annotations ; Data acquisition ; Digital media ; Islam ; Muslims ; Qualitative analysis ; Sampling methods ; Social networks ; Terrorism</subject><ispartof>arXiv.org, 2015-12</ispartof><rights>2015. This work is published under http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/ (the “License”). 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Most of the tweets were condemning the attacks and showing support to Parisians. One of the trending debates related to the attacks concerned possible association between terrorism and Islam and Muslims in general. This created a global discussion between those attacking and those defending Islam and Muslims. In this paper, we provide quantitative and qualitative analysis of data collection we streamed from Twitter starting 7 hours after the Paris attacks and for 50 subsequent hours that are related to blaming Islam and Muslims and to defending them. We collected a set of 8.36 million tweets in this epoch consisting of tweets in many different of languages. We could identify a subset consisting of 900K tweets relating to Islam and Muslims. Using sampling methods and crowd-sourcing annotation, we managed to estimate the public response of these tweets. Our findings show that the majority of the tweets were in fact defending Muslims and absolving them from responsibility for the attacks. However, a considerable number of tweets were blaming Muslims, with most of these tweets coming from western countries such as the Netherlands, France, and the US.</abstract><cop>Ithaca</cop><pub>Cornell University Library, arXiv.org</pub><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Annotations Data acquisition Digital media Islam Muslims Qualitative analysis Sampling methods Social networks Terrorism |
title | Quantifying Public Response towards Islam on Twitter after Paris Attacks |
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