Fueling toxicity? Studying deceitful opinion leaders and behavioral changes of their followers

Puck Guldemond*, Andreu Casas, Mariken van der Velden

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The spread of deceiving content on social media platforms is a growing concern amongst scholars, policymakers, and the public at large. We examine the extent to which influential users (i.e., “deceitful opinion leaders”) on Twitter engage in the spread of different types of deceiving content, thereby overcoming the compartmentalized state of the field. We introduce a theoretical concept and approach that puts these deceitful opinion leaders at the center, instead of the content they spread. Moreover, our study contributes to the understanding of the effects that these deceiving messages have on other Twitter users. For 5,574 users and 731,371 unique messages, we apply computational methods to study changes in messaging behavior after they started following a set of eight Dutch deceitful opinion leaders on Twitter during the Dutch 2021 election campaign. The results show that users apply more uncivil language, become more affectively polarized, and talk more about politics after following a deceitful opinion leader. Our results thereby underline that this small group of deceitful opinion leaders change the norms of conversation on these platforms. Hence, this accentuates the need for future research to study the literary concept of deceitful opinion leaders.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)336-348
JournalPolitics and Governance
Volume10
Issue number4
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Funding

This research is funded by an NWA Small Project Grant (“When Words Do the Trick: The Effect of Rhetorical Strategy on the Perceived Legitimacy of Political Decision‐ Making”) awarded to Dr. Mariken van der Velden and Dr. Andreu Casas Salleras. We thank the members of the Political Communication Group at the Free University Amsterdam, and the participants of the workshop “Negative Politics: Leader Personality, Negative Campaigning, and the Oppositional Dynamics of Contemporary Politics” and the panel “How the Type of Media Use Affects Belief in Conspiracy Theories and Misinformation” at ICA’22 for their thoughtful comments and suggestions on early versions of this manuscript. This research is funded by an NWA Small Project Grant (“When Words Do the Trick: The Effect of Rhetorical Strategy on the Perceived Legitimacy of Political Decision‐ Making”) awarded to Dr. Mariken van der Velden and Dr. Andreu Casas Salleras. We thank the mem‐ bers of the Political Communication Group at the Free University Amsterdam, and the participants of the workshop “Negative Politics: Leader Personality, Negative Campaigning, and the Oppositional Dynamics of Contemporary Politics” and the panel “How the Type of Media Use Affects Belief in Conspiracy Theories and Misinformation” at ICA’22 for their thoughtful comments and suggestions on early versions of this manuscript.

FundersFunder number
Oppositional Dynamics of Contemporary Politics
Northwest Airlines

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