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Author(s)

Alessandro Bessi

Fabiana Zollo

Michela Del Vicario

Michelangelo Puliga

Antonio Scala

Guido Caldarelli

Brian Uzzi

Walter Quattrociocchi

Users online tend to select information that support and adhere their beliefs, and to form polarized groups sharing the same view -- e.g. echo chambers. Algorithms for content pro-motion may favour this phenomenon, by accounting for users preferences and thus limiting the exposure to unsolicited contents. To shade light on this question, we perform a comparative study on how same contents (videos) are consumed on different online social media -- i.e. Facebook and YouTube -- over a sample of 12M of users. Our findings show that content drives the emergence of echo chambers on both platforms. Moreover, we show that the users’ commenting patterns are accurate predictors for the formation of echo-chambers.
Date Published: 2016
Citations: Bessi, Alessandro, Fabiana Zollo, Michela Del Vicario, Michelangelo Puliga, Antonio Scala, Guido Caldarelli, Brian Uzzi, Walter Quattrociocchi. 2016. Users Polarization on Facebook and Youtube. PLoS ONE. (8)