كوكب الرمال

  • 3 years ago
Transcript
00:00the terrorist group and the fanatic groups of the white race and other types of extremist ideological groups
00:06They're people who use that language to communicate their message and recruit people for their cause.
00:12Dr. Brennan, I'm sorry.
00:15D
00:20At NYU in the heart of Manhattan. The Department of Social and Cognitive Psychology, headed by Professor G. Van Babel, is closely watching
00:30the new attempts for political manipulation .
00:35Hey, there. That
00:37Hey, there. I followed the news today. What's the latest?
00:41The president is still angry about the Ukrainian scandal whistleblowers.
00:46Yeah, he's using similar words to provoke a reaction on Twitter.
00:53Here, the symbols of all Donald Trump's media statements were decoded
00:59among prominent politicians. He may be the one who exploits the power of emotions the most. It's actually the main component of his policy.
01:08D
01:10To prove it, these researchers searched social networking sites for very distinctive emotional vocabulary.
01:19One way is to take an existing dictionary or lexicon.
01:25It basically lists several thousand words that are usually associated with people
01:31Who express an emotional language.
01:34okay
01:35For example, you have words like terrorism and attack and murder and victim.
01:41These are words that often evoke emotional excitement in people.
01:46D
01:49Their search engine targeted a total of more than 5,000 strong emotional words. This way scientists can count the publications that contain this type of vocabulary.
02:02Ivory
02:03We discovered that when people use this kind of language in tweets, it's associated with the greatest admiration and participation of people.
02:14If we find a 20% increase in participation when people use more emotional language in their tweets,
02:22Their analysis of the network goes further than that, in addition to the tweets of political leaders, which are widely shared through social networks
02:33There. And more importantly, a collection of information now known as fake news
02:41An extensive study found that fake news spreads faster than real news. The reason for this appears to be that it contains emotional content.
02:51It's designed to provoke rage, anger, sadness, or joy.
02:56And that emotional content plays a helpful role in spreading this news.