Skip to content
The Times USA
Menu
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • LIFESTYLE
  • NATIONAL NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • INTERNATIONAL NEWS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • PRICE OF BUSINESS SHOW AUDIOS
Menu

Is There a Link Between Hate Crimes on Twitter and Reality?

Posted on July 18, 2019July 4, 2019 by admin

According to a first-of-its-kind study, cities with a higher incidence of a certain kind of racist tweets reported more actual hate crimes related to race, ethnicity, and national origin.

A New York University research team analyzed the location and linguistic features of 532 million tweets published between 2011 and 2016. They trained a machine learning model – one form of artificial intelligence – to identify and analyze two types of tweets: those that are targeted – directly espousing discriminatory views – and those that are self-narrative – describing or commenting upon discriminatory remarks or acts. The team compared the prevalence of each type of discriminatory tweet to the number of actual hate crimes reported during that same time period in those same cities.

The research was led by Rumi Chunara, an assistant professor of computer science and engineering at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering and biostatistics at the NYU College of Global Public Health, and Stephanie Cook, an assistant professor of biostatistics and social and behavioral sciences at the NYU College of Global Public Health.

“We found that more targeted, discriminatory tweets posted in a city related to a higher number of hate crimes,” said Chunara. “This trend across different types of cities (for example, urban, rural, large, and small) confirms the need to more specifically study how different types of discriminatory speech online may contribute to consequences in the physical world.”

The analysis included cities with a wide range of urbanization, varying degrees of population diversity, and different levels of social media usage. The team limited the dataset to tweets and bias crimes describing or motivated by race, ethnic or national origin-based discrimination. Hate crimes are categorized and tracked by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and crimes motivated by race, ethnicity, or national origin represent the largest proportion of hate crimes in the nation. Statistics for sexual orientation crimes were not available in all cities, although the researchers previously studied this form of bias.

The group also identified a set of discriminatory terms and phrases that are commonly used on social media across the country, as well as terms specific to a particular city or region. These insights could prove useful in identifying groups that may be likelier targets of racially motivated crimes and types of discrimination in different places. While most tweets included in this analysis were generated by actual Twitter users, the team found that an average of 8% of tweets containing targeted discriminatory language were generated by bots.

There was a negative relationship between the proportion of race/ethnicity/national-origin-based discrimination tweets that were self-narrations of experiences and the number of crimes based on the same biases in cities. Chunara noted that while experiences of discrimination in the real world are known psychological stressors with health and social consequences, the implications of online exposure to different types of online discrimination – self-narrations versus targeted, for example – need further study.

These results represent one of the largest, most comprehensive analyses of discriminatory social media posts and real-life bias crimes in this country, although the researchers emphasize that the specific causal mechanisms between social media hate speech and real-life acts of violence need to be explored.

Chunara recently presented the study, Race, Ethnicity and National Origin-based Discrimination in Social Media and Hate Crimes across 100 U.S. Cities, at the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence Conference on Web and Social Media in Munich, Germany. Co-authors include NYU Tandon students Kunal Relia and Zhengyi Li in addition to Cook.

The researchers were also recently awarded a Content Policy Research on Social Media Platforms research grant from Facebook, through which they will continue their work on the downstream consequences of online discrimination.

You Might Also Like...

  • The Big Difference Between Profit and Wealth

    FROM THE PRICE OF BUSINESS, Media Partner of This Website   Recently Kevin Price, Host of…

  • The Big Difference Between Profit and Wealth

    FROM THE PRICE OF BUSINESS, Media Partner of This Website   Recently Kevin Price, Host of…

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Celebrating 25 Years of the Price of Business Show

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ViFPGoK-ks

VIDEO: This Week’s Best of our Network

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y8-5_dL8hSw

GDPR Compliance

USABR does not collect data on its visitors.  For more information visit: https://www.usabusinessradio.com/contact-us/

Contact

Contact articles@usabusinessradio.net for more information on articles on this site. BMuyco@usabusinessradio.net for all other information.

Recent Articles

  • Students Seeking Competitive Advantage Through Z-Library
  • How Custom Mailer Boxes Help Brands Launch Faster on 3-Day Timelines
  • How to Wear Oud – and Why Most People Get It Wrong the First Time
  • 2026 Estate Planning Strategies for Exiting Business Owners
  • How Private Group Tours Wrangell Handle Bathrooms, Snacks, and Cold Water

Also in TTUSA

  • 10th Anniversary of the International Surrealism Now Exhibition at CAE
  • Sage Advice for a Generation: Persevering in Your Career
  • 5 Ways To Improve Productivity In An Engineering Company
  • How Danny Singson Transitioned From A Police Officer To Leading The #1 Financial Brokerage Firm In All Of San Francisco Bay Area
  • Are a Virgo Man and a Sagittarius Woman Compatible?

RSS The Daily Blaze

  • Trump’s Real Options Regarding Foreign Trade Practices
  • Crisis Management in the Digital Age: For Better or Worse, Social Media Frames the Strategy
  • The Far Reacing Implications on Supreme Court’s Voting Rights Decision
  • Deep Dive on How To Navigate Investing Now
  • After Shunning “The Devil Wears Prada,” Vogue Is Embracing the Sequel. Why?

RSS USA Business Radio

  • Two Questions To Ask Any Long Term Care Insurance Specialist
  • What “Health” Tests Does My Business Need?
  • What Real Estate Investors Need To Know About Hard Money Loans
  • More Questions and Answers on the COVID Tax Refund
  • Production As Precedent: The It Ends With Us Legal Battle

RSS USA Daily Times

  • Get Organized Day Is April 26. But if We Aren’t Organized Yet, What Are the Chances This Year Will Be Different?
  • Kwong v. United States: A New Legal Precedent for Taxpayers
  • Culture Scholar – Part Two: From Survival to Systems
  • Why Sugar Is So Hard To Quit
  • The Ides of March Is Fast Approaching; Take Heed of Any Warnings in Your Enterprise Data

RSS USA Daily Chronicles.

  • Reclaiming Every Dollar: The Pandemic-Era Interest Freeze
  • The Value Acceleration Journey: How Privately Held Businesses Intentionally Build Enterprise Value
  • Smart Food Choices To Prevent Diabetes
  • When Empathy Backfires: The Leadership Relational Trap
  • How To Make Doula Services Affordable

RSS Price of Business

  • Olujo Tequila: How Adam Weitsman Built an Ultra-Premium Spirit From Scratch
  • Ignacio Duron: Building Leadership From the Ground Up
  • Tony Buzbee and the Power of Big, Disciplined Ideas
  • Is Your Flight Booking Site Actually Safe? Here’s How To Find Out
  • Planning Applications in Essex: Rules, Requirements and Advice

RSS US Daily Review

  • Lesli Doares’ Commentary Feature on the Price of Business Digital Network
  • One Year Into the Post-NAR Commission Market, Choice Home Warranty Is Showing Up in More Seller Listing Packages
  • How To Transform Your Life
  • The Signature of the Die: The Invisible Architecture of Everyday Objects
  • A Guide to Finding a Reliable Plumber in Portland Metro Oregon

PoB Digital Network

US Daily Review

USA Business Radio

USA Daily Chronicles

USA Daily Times

The Daily Blaze

The Times USA

Price of Business

Privacy Policy

https://www.thetimesusa.com/privacy-policy-2/

© 2026 The Times USA | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme