Brexit and bots: characterizing the behaviour of automated accounts on Twitter during the UK election
Matteo Bruno, Renaud Lambiotte, Fabio Saracco

TL;DR
This study analyzes Twitter activity during the 2019 UK election, revealing how automated accounts influenced Brexit discussions, especially around key events, with distinct behaviors and political stances across different periods.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of bot activity and network structure during a major political event, highlighting temporal dynamics and behavioral differences.
Findings
Bots increased significantly before the election
Post-debate, a surge of novel bots with different behaviors appeared
Automated accounts' activity spans the entire political spectrum
Abstract
Online Social Networks represent a novel opportunity for political campaigns, revolutionising the paradigm of political communication. Nevertheless, many studies uncovered the presence of d/misinformation campaigns or of malicious activities by genuine or automated users, putting at severe risk the credibility of online platforms. This phenomenon is particularly evident during crucial political events, as political elections. In the present paper, we provide a comprehensive description of the structure of the networks of interactions among users and bots during the UK elections of 2019. In particular, we focus on the polarised discussion about Brexit on Twitter analysing a data set made of more than 10 million tweets posted for over a month. We found that the presence of automated accounts fostered the debate particularly in the days before the UK national elections, in which we find a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMisinformation and Its Impacts · Social Media and Politics · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence
