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Autore principale: Formentin, Simone
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.02663
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author Formentin, Simone
author_facet Formentin, Simone
contents We investigate feedback mechanisms in political communication by testing whether politicians adapt the sentiment of their messages in response to public engagement. Using over 1.5 million tweets from Members of Parliament in the United Kingdom, Spain, and Greece during 2021, we identify sentiment dynamics through a simple yet interpretable linear model. The analysis reveals a closed-loop behavior: engagement with positive and negative messages influences the sentiment of subsequent posts. Moreover, the learned coefficients highlight systematic differences across political roles: opposition members are more reactive to negative engagement, whereas government officials respond more to positive signals. These results provide a quantitative, control-oriented view of behavioral adaptation in online politics, showing how feedback principles can explain the self-reinforcing dynamics that emerge in social media discourse.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_02663
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Feedback dynamics in Politics: The interplay between sentiment and engagement
Formentin, Simone
Social and Information Networks
Computers and Society
Systems and Control
We investigate feedback mechanisms in political communication by testing whether politicians adapt the sentiment of their messages in response to public engagement. Using over 1.5 million tweets from Members of Parliament in the United Kingdom, Spain, and Greece during 2021, we identify sentiment dynamics through a simple yet interpretable linear model. The analysis reveals a closed-loop behavior: engagement with positive and negative messages influences the sentiment of subsequent posts. Moreover, the learned coefficients highlight systematic differences across political roles: opposition members are more reactive to negative engagement, whereas government officials respond more to positive signals. These results provide a quantitative, control-oriented view of behavioral adaptation in online politics, showing how feedback principles can explain the self-reinforcing dynamics that emerge in social media discourse.
title Feedback dynamics in Politics: The interplay between sentiment and engagement
topic Social and Information Networks
Computers and Society
Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.02663