Bridging or Breaking: Impact of Intergroup Interactions on Religious
Polarization
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2402.11895v3
- Date: Sun, 10 Mar 2024 05:38:20 GMT
- Title: Bridging or Breaking: Impact of Intergroup Interactions on Religious
Polarization
- Authors: Rochana Chaturvedi, Sugat Chaturvedi and Elena Zheleva
- Abstract summary: We examine whether intergroup interactions around important events affect polarization between majority and minority groups in social networks.
We use data on the religious identity of nearly 700,000 Indian Twitter users engaging in COVID-19-related discourse during 2020.
We find that for political and social events, intergroup interactions reduce polarization. This decline is weaker for individuals at the extreme who already exhibit high conformity to their group.
In contrast, during communal events, intergroup interactions can increase group conformity.
- Score: 10.640364016644883
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: While exposure to diverse viewpoints may reduce polarization, it can also
have a backfire effect and exacerbate polarization when the discussion is
adversarial. Here, we examine the question whether intergroup interactions
around important events affect polarization between majority and minority
groups in social networks. We compile data on the religious identity of nearly
700,000 Indian Twitter users engaging in COVID-19-related discourse during
2020. We introduce a new measure for an individual's group conformity based on
contextualized embeddings of tweet text, which helps us assess polarization
between religious groups. We then use a meta-learning framework to examine
heterogeneous treatment effects of intergroup interactions on an individual's
group conformity in the light of communal, political, and socio-economic
events. We find that for political and social events, intergroup interactions
reduce polarization. This decline is weaker for individuals at the extreme who
already exhibit high conformity to their group. In contrast, during communal
events, intergroup interactions can increase group conformity. Finally, we
decompose the differential effects across religious groups in terms of emotions
and topics of discussion. The results show that the dynamics of religious
polarization are sensitive to the context and have important implications for
understanding the role of intergroup interactions.
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