Mark My Words! Linguistic Style Accommodation in Social Media
Cristian Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil, Michael Gamon, Susan Dumais

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether linguistic style accommodation occurs in Twitter conversations, using a probabilistic model on a large dataset, revealing complex patterns and potential links to social status.
Contribution
It introduces the first large-scale, real-world analysis of linguistic style accommodation in social media, extending psycholinguistic theory beyond controlled settings.
Findings
Accommodation occurs in Twitter conversations despite constraints
Complex patterns of stylistic influence and symmetry are observed
Potential correlation between stylistic influence and social status features
Abstract
The psycholinguistic theory of communication accommodation accounts for the general observation that participants in conversations tend to converge to one another's communicative behavior: they coordinate in a variety of dimensions including choice of words, syntax, utterance length, pitch and gestures. In its almost forty years of existence, this theory has been empirically supported exclusively through small-scale or controlled laboratory studies. Here we address this phenomenon in the context of Twitter conversations. Undoubtedly, this setting is unlike any other in which accommodation was observed and, thus, challenging to the theory. Its novelty comes not only from its size, but also from the non real-time nature of conversations, from the 140 character length restriction, from the wide variety of social relation types, and from a design that was initially not geared towards…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuthorship Attribution and Profiling · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence
