Automated Identification of Media Bias by Word Choice and Labeling in News Articles

Media bias can strongly impact the individual and public perception of news events. One difficult-to-detect, yet powerful form of slanted news coverage is bias by word choice and labeling (WCL). Bias by WCL can occur when journalists refer to the same concept, yet use different terms, which results...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2019 ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL) pp. 196 - 205
Main Authors Hamborg, Felix, Zhukova, Anastasia, Gipp, Bela
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.06.2019
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DOI10.1109/JCDL.2019.00036

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Summary:Media bias can strongly impact the individual and public perception of news events. One difficult-to-detect, yet powerful form of slanted news coverage is bias by word choice and labeling (WCL). Bias by WCL can occur when journalists refer to the same concept, yet use different terms, which results in different sentiments being sparked in the readers, such as the terms "economic migrants" vs. "refugees." We present an automated approach to identify bias by WCL that employs models and manual analysis approaches from the social sciences, a research domain in which media bias has been studied for decades. This paper makes three contributions. First, we present NewsWCL50, the first open evaluation dataset for the identification of bias by WCL consisting of 8,656 manual annotations in 50 news articles. Second, we propose a method capable of extracting instances of bias by WCL while outperforming state-of-the-art methods, such as coreference resolution, which currently cannot resolve very broadly defined or abstract coreferences used by journalists. We evaluate our method on the NewsWCL50 dataset, achieving an F1=45.7% compared to F1=29.8% achieved by the best performing state-of-the-art technique. Lastly, we present a prototype demonstrating the effectiveness of our approach in finding frames caused by bias by WCL.
DOI:10.1109/JCDL.2019.00036