The Unfolding Structure of Arguments in Online Debates: The case of a No-Deal Brexit
Carlo Santagiustina, Massimo Warglien

TL;DR
This paper introduces a five-step methodology to analyze the argumentation structures and factional dynamics in online debates, demonstrated through Twitter discussions on a no-deal Brexit, revealing polarized narratives and topical dependencies.
Contribution
It presents a novel systematic approach combining regex, topic modeling, and network analysis to uncover argumentation patterns and factional influences in online political debates.
Findings
Debate structure is heavily factional and polarized.
Arguments are organized into topical constellations.
Time dynamics reveal lead/follow relations among factions.
Abstract
In the last decade, political debates have progressively shifted to social media. Rhetorical devices employed by online actors and factions that operate in these debating arenas can be captured and analysed to conduct a statistical reading of societal controversies and their argumentation dynamics. In this paper, we propose a five-step methodology, to extract, categorize and explore the latent argumentation structures of online debates. Using Twitter data about a "no-deal" Brexit, we focus on the expected effects in case of materialisation of this event. First, we extract cause-effect claims contained in tweets using RegEx that exploit verbs related to Creation, Destruction and Causation. Second, we categorise extracted "no-deal" effects using a Structural Topic Model estimated on unigrams and bigrams. Third, we select controversial effect topics and explore within-topic argumentation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEuropean and International Law Studies · Social Media and Politics · Cybersecurity and Cyber Warfare Studies
