The next speaker in this high-density session at the 2026 International Communication Association conference in Cape Town is Sujin Yoon, whose focus is on group polarisation. Her particular interest is in opinion and structural convergence, and she begins by noting the limitations of studying such convergence in experimental settings; work with observational data is required here, therefore.
Group polarisation means a convergence of groups towards their dominant views; this also conditions Intra-group and inter-group interactions. Emotional factors such as anger and pride can affect this.
The present study examines this for the r/conservative and r/democrats subreddits, over six months in …
The next paper in this session at the 2026 International Communication Association conference in Cape Town is presented on behalf of Chao Wu and Michelle Seelig, and focusses on public discussions of the COP21 (2016) and COP25 (2020) climate conferences on Reddit, with a particular focus on climate-contrarian comments.
Climate-contrarian claims were identified through the CARDS framework and its claims classifiers; this sorts claims into five broad categories of typical climate change-denialist rhetoric. The project then also conducted topic modelling, and clustered topics by their affinity with each other. This showed clear distinctions between the two events, with more issued-centred …
As I wrap up my Mercator Fellowship at ZeMKI in Bremen, I’ve made a side trip to the 2026 International Communication Association conference in Cape Town, which starts for me with a session on the application of network analysis to polarised contexts. We start with Shengyi Gao, whose interest is in group polarisation. She notes the growing fragmentation of social media environments, which creates structural holes in such networks; some users are ‘structural hole spanners’, however, who bridge such gaps by their activities.
The focus here is on Weibo, and the network is constructed from post forwarding activities; the posts …