Gender differences in online communication: A case study of Soccer
Mariana Macedo, Akrati Saxena

TL;DR
This study analyzes gender-based differences in soccer-related Twitter communication, revealing women express emotions more intensely and highlighting gender gaps in online sports discussions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of gender differences in online soccer communication using large-scale Twitter data, including sentiment and network analysis.
Findings
Women express emotions more intensely than men.
Portuguese Twitter networks have lower homophily than English.
Gender differences in communication are consistent across languages.
Abstract
Social media and digital platforms allow us to express our opinions freely and easily to a vast number of people. In this study, we examine whether there are gender-based differences in how communication happens via Twitter in regard to soccer. Soccer is one of the most popular sports, and therefore, on social media, it engages a diverse audience regardless of their technical knowledge. We collected Twitter data for three months (March-June) for English and Portuguese that contains 9.5 million Tweets related to soccer, and only 18.38% tweets were identified as belonging to women, highlighting a possible gender gap already in the number of people who participated actively in this topic. We then conduct a fine-grained text-level and network-level analysis to identify the gender differences that might exist while communicating on Twitter. Our results show that women express their emotions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Games and Media · Gender and Technology in Education · Sports, Gender, and Society
