scholarly journals Current State of the Art to Detect Fake News in Social Media: Global Trendings and Next Challenges

Author(s):  
Alvaro Figueira ◽  
Nuno Guimaraes ◽  
Luis Torgo
Author(s):  
Moemmur Shahzad ◽  
Ayesha Amin ◽  
Diego Esteves ◽  
Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo

We investigate the problem of named entity recognition in the user-generated text such as social media posts. This task is rendered particularly difficult by the restricted length and limited grammatical coherence of this data type. Current state-of-the-art approaches rely on external sources such as gazetteers to alleviate some of these restrictions. We present a neural model able to outperform state of the art on this task without recurring to gazetteers or similar external sources of information. Our approach relies on word-, character-, and sentence-level information for NER in short-text. Social media posts like tweets often have associated images that may provide auxiliary context relevant to understand these texts. Hence, we also incorporate visual information and introduce an attention component which computes attention weight probabilities over textual and text-relevant visual contexts separately. Our model outperforms the current state of the art on various NER datasets. On WNUT 2016 and 2017, our model achieved 53.48\% and 50.52\% F1 score, respectively. With Multimodal model, our system also outperforms the current SOTA with an F1 score of 74\% on the multimodal dataset. Our evaluation further suggests that our model also goes beyond the current state-of-the-art on newswire data, hence corroborating its suitability for various NER tasks.


Author(s):  
Isa Inuwa-Dutse

Conventional preventive measures during pandemics include social distancing and lockdown. Such measures in the time of social media brought about a new set of challenges – vulnerability to the toxic impact of online misinformation is high. A case in point is COVID-19. As the virus propagates, so does the associated misinformation and fake news about it leading to an infodemic. Since the outbreak, there has been a surge of studies investigating various aspects of the pandemic. Of interest to this chapter are studies centering on datasets from online social media platforms where the bulk of the public discourse happens. The main goal is to support the fight against negative infodemic by (1) contributing a diverse set of curated relevant datasets; (2) offering relevant areas to study using the datasets; and (3) demonstrating how relevant datasets, strategies, and state-of-the-art IT tools can be leveraged in managing the pandemic.


2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 1391-1414
Author(s):  
Maja Pavlović ◽  
Ljubiša Bojić

State represents a social phenomenon which is constantly changing - just like all political actors. The direction of that evolution is determined by the development and current state of the art in technological domain. That explains how the rise of social media and new ICTs has shaped the contemporary political communication. This paper sheds light on the manner in which digital tools are exploited in an unpredictable social ambience which is characterized by numerous political crises. Special attention has been given to the phenomenon of digital astroturfing and political disinformation trends in Venezuela and Brazil. We have found that the dynamic technological development combined with the use of political bots has been creating the potential for fake news, thus impacting election processes and endangering democracy. Therefore, these phenomena need further scientific examination.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos Abel Córdova Sáenz ◽  
Marcelo Dias ◽  
Karin Becker

Fake news (FN) have affected people’s lives in unimaginable ways. The automatic classification of FN is a vital tool to prevent their dissemination and support fact-checking. Related work has shown that FN spread faster, deeper, and more broadly than truthful news on social media. Deep learning has produced state-of-the-art solutions in this field, mainly based on textual attributes. In this paper, we propose to combine compact representations of the textual news properties generated using DistilBERT, with topological metrics extracted from their propagation network in social media. Using a dataset related to politics and distinct learning algorithms, we extensively assessed the components of the proposed solution. Regarding the textual attributes, we reached results comparable to stateof-the-art solutions using only the news title and contents, which is useful for FN early detection. We assessed the influential topological metrics, and the effect of their combination with the news textual features. We also explored the use of ensembles. Our results were very promising, revealing the potential of the features proposed and the adoption of ensembles.


2022 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suleman Khan ◽  
Saqib Hakak ◽  
N. Deepa ◽  
B. Prabadevi ◽  
Kapal Dev ◽  
...  

Since its emergence in December 2019, there have been numerous posts and news regarding the COVID-19 pandemic in social media, traditional print, and electronic media. These sources have information from both trusted and non-trusted medical sources. Furthermore, the news from these media are spread rapidly. Spreading a piece of deceptive information may lead to anxiety, unwanted exposure to medical remedies, tricks for digital marketing, and may lead to deadly factors. Therefore, a model for detecting fake news from the news pool is essential. In this work, the dataset which is a fusion of news related to COVID-19 that has been sourced from data from several social media and news sources is used for classification. In the first step, preprocessing is performed on the dataset to remove unwanted text, then tokenization is carried out to extract the tokens from the raw text data collected from various sources. Later, feature selection is performed to avoid the computational overhead incurred in processing all the features in the dataset. The linguistic and sentiment features are extracted for further processing. Finally, several state-of-the-art machine learning algorithms are trained to classify the COVID-19-related dataset. These algorithms are then evaluated using various metrics. The results show that the random forest classifier outperforms the other classifiers with an accuracy of 88.50%.


1995 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 1126-1142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey W. Gilger

This paper is an introduction to behavioral genetics for researchers and practioners in language development and disorders. The specific aims are to illustrate some essential concepts and to show how behavioral genetic research can be applied to the language sciences. Past genetic research on language-related traits has tended to focus on simple etiology (i.e., the heritability or familiality of language skills). The current state of the art, however, suggests that great promise lies in addressing more complex questions through behavioral genetic paradigms. In terms of future goals it is suggested that: (a) more behavioral genetic work of all types should be done—including replications and expansions of preliminary studies already in print; (b) work should focus on fine-grained, theory-based phenotypes with research designs that can address complex questions in language development; and (c) work in this area should utilize a variety of samples and methods (e.g., twin and family samples, heritability and segregation analyses, linkage and association tests, etc.).


1976 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 497-498
Author(s):  
STANLEY GRAND

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