Detecting Narrative Shifts through Persistent Structures: A Topological Analysis of Media Discourse
Mark M. Bailey, Mark I. Heiligman

TL;DR
This paper presents a topological framework using persistent homology to detect structural changes in media narratives during major global events, revealing how discourse reorganizes in response to crises.
Contribution
It introduces a novel topological method for identifying narrative shifts in media discourse without prior event knowledge, using persistent homology on co-occurrence graphs.
Findings
Major events cause sharp spikes in homological features indicating narrative reorganization.
H0 changes typically precede H1, suggesting a bottom-up semantic shift pattern.
Persistence entropy distinguishes focused from diffuse narrative regimes.
Abstract
How can we detect when global events fundamentally reshape public discourse? This study introduces a topological framework for identifying structural change in media narratives using persistent homology. Drawing on international news articles surrounding major events - including the Russian invasion of Ukraine (Feb 2022), the murder of George Floyd (May 2020), the U.S. Capitol insurrection (Jan 2021), and the Hamas-led invasion of Israel (Oct 2023) - we construct daily co-occurrence graphs of noun phrases to trace evolving discourse. Each graph is embedded and transformed into a persistence diagram via a Vietoris-Rips filtration. We then compute Wasserstein distances and persistence entropies across homological dimensions to capture semantic disruption and narrative volatility over time. Our results show that major geopolitical and social events align with sharp spikes in both H0…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques · Computational and Text Analysis Methods · Language and cultural evolution
MethodsALIGN
