# Social Bots: Human-Like by Means of Human Control?

**Authors:** Christian Grimme, Mike Preuss, Lena Adam, Heike Trautmann

arXiv: 1706.07624 · 2017-06-26

## TL;DR

This paper examines social bots, their definitions, technical limitations, and proposes integrating human control to enhance their effectiveness and reliability in social media interactions.

## Contribution

It offers a balanced definition of social bots, reviews their operational mechanisms and limitations, and advocates for human integration to improve their capabilities.

## Key findings

- Social bots have limited capabilities despite advances in AI.
- Human control can extend and improve bot functionalities.
- Effective human-bot interaction is promising for social media influence.

## Abstract

Social bots are currently regarded an influential but also somewhat mysterious factor in public discourse and opinion making. They are considered to be capable of massively distributing propaganda in social and online media and their application is even suspected to be partly responsible for recent election results. Astonishingly, the term `Social Bot' is not well defined and different scientific disciplines use divergent definitions. This work starts with a balanced definition attempt, before providing an overview of how social bots actually work (taking the example of Twitter) and what their current technical limitations are. Despite recent research progress in Deep Learning and Big Data, there are many activities bots cannot handle well. We then discuss how bot capabilities can be extended and controlled by integrating humans into the process and reason that this is currently the most promising way to go in order to realize effective interactions with other humans.

## Full text

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## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.07624/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.07624