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Whose lives matter? Mass shootings and social media discourses of sympathy and policy, 2012–2014

  • Yini Zhang
  • , Dhavan Shah
  • , Jordan Foley
  • , Aman Abhishek
  • , Josephine Lukito
  • , Jiyoun Suk
  • , Sang Jung Kim
  • , Zhongkai Sun
  • , Jon Pevehouse
  • , Christine Garlough
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

63 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study focuses on the outpouring of sympathy in response to mass shootings and the contesta-tion over gun policy on Twitter from 2012 to 2014 and relates these discourses to features of mass shooting events. We use two approaches to Twitter text analysis—hashtag grouping and super-vised machine learning (ML)—to triangulate an understanding of intensity and duration of “thoughts and prayers,” gun control, and gun rights discourses. We conduct parallel time series analyses to predict their temporal patterns in response to features of mass shootings. Our analyses reveal that while the total number of victims and child deaths consistently predicted public griev-ing and calls for gun control, public shootings consistently predicted the defense of gun rights. Further, the race of victims and perpetrators affected the levels of public mourning and policy debates, with the loss of black lives and the violence inflicted by white shooters generating less sympathy and policy discourses.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)182-202
Number of pages21
JournalJournal of Computer-Mediated Communication
Volume24
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 30 2019

Keywords

  • Attention Dynamics
  • Automated Text Analysis
  • Citizen Expression
  • Hashtag Activism
  • Machine Learning (ML)
  • Online Activism
  • Time Series Analysis

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