Automatic detection of influential actors in disinformation networks
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Journal articleDate
2021-01-07Author
Smith, Steven T.Kao, Edward K.
Mackin, Erika D.
Shah, Danelle C.
Simek, Olga
Rubin, Donald B.
Department
Statistical SciencePermanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/6170
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https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2011216118Abstract
The weaponization of digital communications and social media to conduct disinformation campaigns at immense scale, speed, and reach presents new challenges to identify and counter hostile influence operations (IOs). This paper presents an end-to-end framework to automate detection of disinformation narratives, networks, and influential actors. The framework integrates natural language processing, machine learning, graph analytics, and a network causal inference approach to quantify the impact of individual actors in spreading IO narratives. We demonstrate its capability on real-world hostile IO campaigns with Twitter datasets collected during the 2017 French presidential elections and known IO accounts disclosed by Twitter over a broad range of IO campaigns (May 2007 to February 2020), over 50,000 accounts, 17 countries, and different account types including both trolls and bots. Our system detects IO accounts with 96% precision, 79% recall, and 96% area-under-the precision-recall (P-R) curve; maps out salient network communities; and discovers high-impact accounts that escape the lens of traditional impact statistics based on activity counts and network centrality. Results are corroborated with independent sources of known IO accounts from US Congressional reports, investigative journalism, and IO datasets provided by Twitter.Citation
Steven T. Smith, Edward K. Kao, Erika D. Mackin, Danelle C. Shah, Olga Simek, Donald B. Rubin. Automatic detection of influential actors in disinformation networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Jan 2021, 118 (4) e2011216118. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2011216118Citation to related work
Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesHas part
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 118, Number 4ADA compliance
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http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/6152
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