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Main Authors: Cakmak, Mert Can, Agarwal, Nitin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.02543
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author Cakmak, Mert Can
Agarwal, Nitin
author_facet Cakmak, Mert Can
Agarwal, Nitin
contents YouTube Shorts and other short-form video platforms now influence how billions engage with content, yet their recommendation systems remain largely opaque. Small shifts in promoted content can significantly impact user exposure, especially for politically sensitive topics. In this work, we propose a keyframe-based method to audit bias and drift in short-form video recommendations. Rather than analyzing full videos or relying on metadata, we extract perceptually salient keyframes, generate captions, and embed both into a shared content space. Using visual mapping across recommendation chains, we observe consistent shifts and clustering patterns that indicate topic drift and potential filtering. Comparing politically sensitive topics with general YouTube categories, we find notable differences in recommendation behavior. Our findings show that keyframes provide an efficient and interpretable lens for understanding bias in short-form video algorithms.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2509_02543
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Keyframe-Based Approach for Auditing Bias in YouTube Shorts Recommendations
Cakmak, Mert Can
Agarwal, Nitin
Social and Information Networks
YouTube Shorts and other short-form video platforms now influence how billions engage with content, yet their recommendation systems remain largely opaque. Small shifts in promoted content can significantly impact user exposure, especially for politically sensitive topics. In this work, we propose a keyframe-based method to audit bias and drift in short-form video recommendations. Rather than analyzing full videos or relying on metadata, we extract perceptually salient keyframes, generate captions, and embed both into a shared content space. Using visual mapping across recommendation chains, we observe consistent shifts and clustering patterns that indicate topic drift and potential filtering. Comparing politically sensitive topics with general YouTube categories, we find notable differences in recommendation behavior. Our findings show that keyframes provide an efficient and interpretable lens for understanding bias in short-form video algorithms.
title A Keyframe-Based Approach for Auditing Bias in YouTube Shorts Recommendations
topic Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.02543