Good Friends, Bad News - Affect and Virality in Twitter
Lars Kai Hansen, Adam Arvidsson, Finn {\AA}rup Nielsen, Elanor, Colleoni, Michael Etter

TL;DR
This study investigates how affect influences virality on Twitter, finding that negative sentiment boosts retweets for news content, contrasting with prior email-based findings that positive affect increases sharing.
Contribution
It provides a nuanced analysis of affect and virality on Twitter, distinguishing between news and non-news content and highlighting the complex relationship between sentiment and sharing.
Findings
Negative sentiment increases retweets in news content.
Positive affect does not significantly boost virality in non-news tweets.
Twitter's retweet dynamics differ from email, resembling traditional news media.
Abstract
The link between affect, defined as the capacity for sentimental arousal on the part of a message, and virality, defined as the probability that it be sent along, is of significant theoretical and practical importance, e.g. for viral marketing. A quantitative study of emailing of articles from the NY Times finds a strong link between positive affect and virality, and, based on psychological theories it is concluded that this relation is universally valid. The conclusion appears to be in contrast with classic theory of diffusion in news media emphasizing negative affect as promoting propagation. In this paper we explore the apparent paradox in a quantitative analysis of information diffusion on Twitter. Twitter is interesting in this context as it has been shown to present both the characteristics social and news media. The basic measure of virality in Twitter is the probability of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Misinformation and Its Impacts · Social Media and Politics
