American social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the War in Ukraine

Abstract Though ideological differences have long been a ubiquitous feature of American politics, the rise of online news and social media has exacerbated divisions between groups. While existing research has documented how political preferences manifest online, relatively few studies have considere...

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Main Authors: William G. Nomikos, Dahjin Kim, Gechun Lin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2025-02-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-04304-7
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author William G. Nomikos
Dahjin Kim
Gechun Lin
author_facet William G. Nomikos
Dahjin Kim
Gechun Lin
author_sort William G. Nomikos
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Though ideological differences have long been a ubiquitous feature of American politics, the rise of online news and social media has exacerbated divisions between groups. While existing research has documented how political preferences manifest online, relatively few studies have considered whether ideological divisions extend to discussions of foreign policy. We examine this question by analyzing nearly 2 million tweets about the war in Ukraine posted by Americans during the opening stages of the Russian invasion. We first categorize each tweet according to the user’s ideological leanings estimated by the network of political accounts they follow. Then, we apply a natural language processing model specifically designed for short texts to classify the tweets into clusters that we hand code into substantive topics. We find that the topic distributions of conservative, moderate, and liberal users are substantively and statistically different. We further find that conservatives are more likely to spread some form of misinformation and that liberals are more likely to express support for Ukraine. Our paper concludes with a discussion of the implications of our findings for the conduct of U.S. foreign policy.
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spelling doaj-art-0ccedb43b9df46a3b243b9d9b01bad4e2025-02-09T12:25:58ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922025-02-011211710.1057/s41599-024-04304-7American social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the War in UkraineWilliam G. Nomikos0Dahjin Kim1Gechun Lin2University of CaliforniaWashington University in St. Louis.Washington University in St. Louis.Abstract Though ideological differences have long been a ubiquitous feature of American politics, the rise of online news and social media has exacerbated divisions between groups. While existing research has documented how political preferences manifest online, relatively few studies have considered whether ideological divisions extend to discussions of foreign policy. We examine this question by analyzing nearly 2 million tweets about the war in Ukraine posted by Americans during the opening stages of the Russian invasion. We first categorize each tweet according to the user’s ideological leanings estimated by the network of political accounts they follow. Then, we apply a natural language processing model specifically designed for short texts to classify the tweets into clusters that we hand code into substantive topics. We find that the topic distributions of conservative, moderate, and liberal users are substantively and statistically different. We further find that conservatives are more likely to spread some form of misinformation and that liberals are more likely to express support for Ukraine. Our paper concludes with a discussion of the implications of our findings for the conduct of U.S. foreign policy.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-04304-7
spellingShingle William G. Nomikos
Dahjin Kim
Gechun Lin
American social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the War in Ukraine
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
title American social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the War in Ukraine
title_full American social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the War in Ukraine
title_fullStr American social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the War in Ukraine
title_full_unstemmed American social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the War in Ukraine
title_short American social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the War in Ukraine
title_sort american social media users have ideological differences of opinion about the war in ukraine
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-04304-7
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