Elisa Omodei

2papers

2 Papers

33.3SOC-PHMar 27
Interplay between social contact and media exposure in the overestimation of racial diversity in the U.S

Clara Eminente, Henrik Olsson, Ljubica Nedelkoska et al.

The general population systematically overestimates the size of minority groups, yet how these misperceptions vary across racial groups and geographical scales remains poorly understood. Using a purpose-built survey of the U.S. population, we examine overestimation of people of color (PoC) communities across four nested geographical scales: neighborhood, city, state, and nation. Our results demonstrate that overestimation is both scale- and group-dependent: the probability of overestimation increases progressively from local to national levels, and people of color overestimate their own group size more frequently than white people do at both the neighborhood and national levels. Among white respondents, we identify a scale-dependent divide in exposure mechanisms: direct interethnic social contact is the primary correlate of overestimation at local levels, whereas perceived frequency of coverage of people of color in news dominates at the national level. Furthermore, across both groups, frequent news consumption is associated with reduced rates of overestimation, while frequent social media use is associated with higher rates. These findings suggest that overestimation is real and present across scales and groups. This in turn can foster an `illusion of diversity', potentially undermining support for equity-promoting policies by creating the erroneous belief that representation goals have already been achieved.

CYSep 19, 2012
Multi-Level Modeling of Quotation Families Morphogenesis

Elisa Omodei, Thierry Poibeau, Jean-Philippe Cointet

This paper investigates cultural dynamics in social media by examining the proliferation and diversification of clearly-cut pieces of content: quoted texts. In line with the pioneering work of Leskovec et al. and Simmons et al. on memes dynamics we investigate in deep the transformations that quotations published online undergo during their diffusion. We deliberately put aside the structure of the social network as well as the dynamical patterns pertaining to the diffusion process to focus on the way quotations are changed, how often they are modified and how these changes shape more or less diverse families and sub-families of quotations. Following a biological metaphor, we try to understand in which way mutations can transform quotations at different scales and how mutation rates depend on various properties of the quotations.