Pandemics, Protests, and Publics

As an integral component of public discourse, Twitter is among the main data sources for scholarship in this area. However, there is much that scholars do not know about the basic mechanisms of public discourse on Twitter, including the prevalence of various modes of communication, the types of pos...

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Published in:Journal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media
Main Authors: Sarah Shugars, Adina Gitomer, Stefan McCabe, Ryan J. Gallagher, Kenneth Joseph, Nir Grinberg, Larissa Doroshenko, Brooke Foucault Welles, David Lazer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: HOPE 2021-04-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalqd.org/article/view/2570
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author Sarah Shugars
Adina Gitomer
Stefan McCabe
Ryan J. Gallagher
Kenneth Joseph
Nir Grinberg
Larissa Doroshenko
Brooke Foucault Welles
David Lazer
author_facet Sarah Shugars
Adina Gitomer
Stefan McCabe
Ryan J. Gallagher
Kenneth Joseph
Nir Grinberg
Larissa Doroshenko
Brooke Foucault Welles
David Lazer
author_sort Sarah Shugars
collection DOAJ
container_title Journal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media
description As an integral component of public discourse, Twitter is among the main data sources for scholarship in this area. However, there is much that scholars do not know about the basic mechanisms of public discourse on Twitter, including the prevalence of various modes of communication, the types of posts users make, the engagement those posts receive, or how these things vary with user demographics and across different topical events. This paper broadens our understanding of these aspects of public discourse. We focus on the first nine months of 2020, studying that period as a whole and giving particular attention to two monumentally important topics of that time: the Black Lives Matter movement and the COVID-19 pandemic. Leveraging a panel of 1.6 million Twitter accounts matched to U.S. voting records, we examine the demographics, activity, and engagement of 800,000 American adults who collectively posted nearly 300 million tweets during this time span. We find notable variation in user activity and engagement, in terms of modality (e.g., retweets vs. replies), demographic subgroup, and topical context. We further find that while Twitter can best be understood as a collection of interconnected publics, neither topical nor demographic variation perfectly encapsulates the "Twitter public." Rather, Twitter publics are fluid, contextual communities which form around salient topics and are informed by demographic identities. Together, this paper presents a disaggregated, multifaceted description of the demographics, activity, and engagement of American Twitter users in 2020.
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spelling doaj-art-7bc69c524d8f4ee7b52045d7f852e2ec2025-08-20T03:36:58ZengHOPEJournal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media2673-88132021-04-01110.51685/jqd.2021.002Pandemics, Protests, and PublicsSarah Shugars0Adina Gitomer1Stefan McCabe2Ryan J. Gallagher3Kenneth Joseph4Nir Grinberg5Larissa Doroshenko6Brooke Foucault Welles7David Lazer8New York UniversityNortheastern UniversityNortheastern UniversityNortheastern UniversityDepartment of Computer Science and Engineering, University at BuffaloDepartment of Software and Information Systems Engineering, Ben-Gurion UniversityDepartment of Communication Studies, Northeastern UniversityNetwork Science Institute, Northeastern University; Department of Communication Studies, Northeastern UniversityNetwork Science Institute, Northeastern University; Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University As an integral component of public discourse, Twitter is among the main data sources for scholarship in this area. However, there is much that scholars do not know about the basic mechanisms of public discourse on Twitter, including the prevalence of various modes of communication, the types of posts users make, the engagement those posts receive, or how these things vary with user demographics and across different topical events. This paper broadens our understanding of these aspects of public discourse. We focus on the first nine months of 2020, studying that period as a whole and giving particular attention to two monumentally important topics of that time: the Black Lives Matter movement and the COVID-19 pandemic. Leveraging a panel of 1.6 million Twitter accounts matched to U.S. voting records, we examine the demographics, activity, and engagement of 800,000 American adults who collectively posted nearly 300 million tweets during this time span. We find notable variation in user activity and engagement, in terms of modality (e.g., retweets vs. replies), demographic subgroup, and topical context. We further find that while Twitter can best be understood as a collection of interconnected publics, neither topical nor demographic variation perfectly encapsulates the "Twitter public." Rather, Twitter publics are fluid, contextual communities which form around salient topics and are informed by demographic identities. Together, this paper presents a disaggregated, multifaceted description of the demographics, activity, and engagement of American Twitter users in 2020. https://journalqd.org/article/view/2570public spherepolitical communicationTwitterCOVID-19Black Lives Matterpolitical discourse
spellingShingle Sarah Shugars
Adina Gitomer
Stefan McCabe
Ryan J. Gallagher
Kenneth Joseph
Nir Grinberg
Larissa Doroshenko
Brooke Foucault Welles
David Lazer
Pandemics, Protests, and Publics
public sphere
political communication
Twitter
COVID-19
Black Lives Matter
political discourse
title Pandemics, Protests, and Publics
title_full Pandemics, Protests, and Publics
title_fullStr Pandemics, Protests, and Publics
title_full_unstemmed Pandemics, Protests, and Publics
title_short Pandemics, Protests, and Publics
title_sort pandemics protests and publics
topic public sphere
political communication
Twitter
COVID-19
Black Lives Matter
political discourse
url https://journalqd.org/article/view/2570
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AT kennethjoseph pandemicsprotestsandpublics
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