Coordinated Behavior on Social Media in 2019 UK General Election.

2020 
Coordinated online behaviors are an important part of information and influence operations, as they allow a more effective disinformation's spread. Most studies on coordinated behaviors involved manual investigations and the few existing computational approaches make bold assumptions or oversimplify the problem to make it tractable. Here, we propose a new network-based framework for uncovering and studying coordinated behaviors on social media. Our proposal extends existing systems and goes beyond limiting binary classifications of coordinated and uncoordinated behaviors. It allows to uncover different patterns of coordination and to estimate the degree of coordination that characterizes different communities. We apply our framework to a dataset collected during the 2019 UK General Election, detecting and characterizing coordinated communities that participated in the electoral debate. Our work conveys both theoretical and practical implications, and provides more nuanced and fine-grained results for studying online manipulation.
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