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Main Authors: Ma, Yuxi, Peng, Yongqian, Zhu, Yixin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.12327
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author Ma, Yuxi
Peng, Yongqian
Zhu, Yixin
author_facet Ma, Yuxi
Peng, Yongqian
Zhu, Yixin
contents Language encodes societal beliefs about social groups through word patterns. While computational methods like word embeddings enable quantitative analysis of these patterns, studies have primarily examined gradual shifts in Western contexts. We present the first large-scale computational analysis of Chinese state-controlled media (1950-2019) to examine how revolutionary social transformations are reflected in official linguistic representations of social groups. Using diachronic word embeddings at multiple temporal resolutions, we find that Chinese representations differ significantly from Western counterparts, particularly regarding economic status, ethnicity, and gender. These representations show distinct evolutionary dynamics: while stereotypes of ethnicity, age, and body type remain remarkably stable across political upheavals, representations of gender and economic classes undergo dramatic shifts tracking historical transformations. This work advances our understanding of how officially sanctioned discourse encodes social structure through language while highlighting the importance of non-Western perspectives in computational social science.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_12327
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Word Embeddings Track Social Group Changes Across 70 Years in China
Ma, Yuxi
Peng, Yongqian
Zhu, Yixin
Computation and Language
Social and Information Networks
Language encodes societal beliefs about social groups through word patterns. While computational methods like word embeddings enable quantitative analysis of these patterns, studies have primarily examined gradual shifts in Western contexts. We present the first large-scale computational analysis of Chinese state-controlled media (1950-2019) to examine how revolutionary social transformations are reflected in official linguistic representations of social groups. Using diachronic word embeddings at multiple temporal resolutions, we find that Chinese representations differ significantly from Western counterparts, particularly regarding economic status, ethnicity, and gender. These representations show distinct evolutionary dynamics: while stereotypes of ethnicity, age, and body type remain remarkably stable across political upheavals, representations of gender and economic classes undergo dramatic shifts tracking historical transformations. This work advances our understanding of how officially sanctioned discourse encodes social structure through language while highlighting the importance of non-Western perspectives in computational social science.
title Word Embeddings Track Social Group Changes Across 70 Years in China
topic Computation and Language
Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.12327