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dc.contributor.authorIqbal, Waleed
dc.contributor.authorGhafouri, Vahid 
dc.contributor.authorTyson, Gareth
dc.contributor.authorSuarez-Tangil, Guillermo 
dc.contributor.authorCastro, Ignacio 
dc.date.accessioned2023-04-10T17:42:15Z
dc.date.available2023-04-10T17:42:15Z
dc.date.issued2023-06
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12761/1684
dc.description.abstractFrom health to education, income impacts a huge range of life choices. Many papers have leveraged data from online social networks to study precisely this. In this paper, we ask the opposite question: do different levels of income result in different online behaviors? We demonstrate it does. We present the first large-scale study of Nextdoor, a popular location-based social network. We collect 2.6 Million posts from 64,283 neighborhoods in the United States and 3,325 neighborhoods in the United Kingdom, to examine whether online discourse reflects the income and income inequality of a neighborhood. We show that posts from neighborhoods with different income indeed differ, e.g. richer neighborhoods have a more positive sentiment and discuss crimes more, even though their actual crime rates are much lower. We then show that user-generated content can predict both income and inequality. We train multiple machine learning models and predict both income (R2=0.841) and inequality (R2=0.77).es
dc.language.isoenges
dc.titleLady and the Tramp Nextdoor: Online Manifestations of Real-World Inequalities in the Nextdoor Social Networkes
dc.typeconference objectes
dc.conference.date5-8 June 2023es
dc.conference.titleInternational Conference on Web and Social Media*
dc.event.typeconferencees
dc.pres.typepaperes
dc.rights.accessRightsopen accesses
dc.acronymICWSM*
dc.rankUnranked*
dc.description.refereedTRUEes
dc.description.statusinpresses


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