Discovery of the Content and Engagement with the Content
This work addresses the problem of understanding citizen engagement with parliamentary transparency efforts for policymakers and platform developers, but it is incremental as it applies existing methods to new data.
The paper analyzes over two years of Google Analytics data to characterize how people engage with UK Parliamentary debate videos, identifying user archetypes based on referral sources like search engines and social media, and finding that these archetypes are primarily distinguished by how users land on the video pages.
In the second half of the 20th century, Parliament allowed broadcasters to transmit radio and eventually television coverage of debates and meetings of select committees. More recently, in an effort to further improve transparency and citizen engagement, the UK Parliament started publishing videos of these debates and meetings itself, and tweeting details of debates as they happened. In this paper, we attempt to characterise how people engage with video data of Parliamentary debates by using more than two years of Google Analytics data around these videos. We analyse the patterns of engagement - how do they land on a particular video? How do they hear about this video, i.e., what is the (HTTP) referrer website that led to the user clicking on the video? Once a user lands on a video, how do they engage with it? For how long is the video played? What is the next destination? etc. Answering these questions is an important first step towards understanding why and how people use Parliamentary videos, and therefore, how the video delivery platform should be adapted and personalised for the needs of the citizens of the country. Taking inspiration from An, Kwak, and Jansen (2017), we employ Non-Negative Matrix Factorization (NMF) (Lee and Seung, 1999) on the video views matrix to identify different archetypes of users, and identify archetypes. A deeper examination of the archetypes we find reveals that they are primarily distinguished by how they land on the video page: Search (i.e., through a search engine), Referral (i.e., from other Parliamentary websites), Direct (i.e., through a direct link, which is embedded on another website), Social (i.e., through a social platform such as Facebook or Twitter) and Others.