Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Male Twitter users biased towards women: Study

Darpan News Desk, IANS, 24 Apr, 2014 11:27 AM
    Gender bias is real on Twitter. According to research, twitter conversations among men feature fewer mentions of women.
     
    “In turn, there were more conversations between female Twitter users that contained references to men than conversations without a male reference,” revealed David Garcia, a researcher at the Chair of Systems Design at Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland.
     
    To figure this out, the scientists used their algorithm to apply the Bechdel test to real-life conversations via social media platform Twitter.
     
    The Bechdel Test, if you are not familiar with it, is a benchmark for movies developed by US cartoonist Alison Bechdel in 1985.
     
    For a movie to pass The Bechdel Test, it must contain just one thing - a scene in which two or more named female characters have a conversation (that is, back and forth dialogue) about anything at all besides men.
     
    In the study, researchers analysed roughly 300 million tweets like a gigantic movie script with 170,000 characters to compute an interaction network.
     
    “I expected that on Twitter men would mention women in their conversations as often as women mentioned men," Garcia said.
     
    The analysis revealed a different picture. Twitter conversations among men featured fewer mentions of women.
     
    The researchers, however, did not find such a male bias in all Twitter users.
     
    The conversations of students proved to be more balanced regarding references to the respective other gender.
     
    In contrast, the tweets of fathers were even more male-biased: they interacted even less with female users and mentioned women even less often than childless men.
     
    “It appears that Twitter is more male-biased," Garcia noted.
     
    Garcia’s algorithm could serve as a tool not only to rate movies in which one of the genders is underrepresented, but also to analyse the design of social networks.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Here's app to help when caught DUI

    Here's app to help when caught DUI
    Had a tipple too many and have to drive thereafter? Don't fear -- if you are caught driving under the influence, switch on this app on your smartphone to know your basic legal rights.

    Here's app to help when caught DUI

    Smart phone tools can drive smokers to quit

    Smart phone tools can drive smokers to quit
    Smart phones and tablets may hold the key to get more clinicians screen patients for tobacco use and advise smokers on how to quit, research shows.

    Smart phone tools can drive smokers to quit

    Here's an App that lets you chat without data connection!

    Here's an App that lets you chat without data connection!
    Move over WhatsApp. Here comes a revolutionary chatting App that has taken the mobile messaging to another level. With this, you are able to send and receive messages even when you do not have an actual internet or wi-fi data connection.

    Here's an App that lets you chat without data connection!

    Soon, Donate Your Voice Too!

    Soon, Donate Your Voice Too!
    Professor Rupal Patel from the Northwestern University and Tim Bunnel from the Nemours Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children have created a new technology called VocaliD that can build synthetic voices using whatever vocal sounds a patient can produce.

    Soon, Donate Your Voice Too!

    Drink from this bottle, then eat it too!

    Drink from this bottle, then eat it too!
    What about drinking your favourite cold drink or simply plain bottled water and then eating the bottle instead of throwing it in the bin or by the roadside? Spanish researchers have designed a blob design for water bottle that is edible.

    Drink from this bottle, then eat it too!

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella brings Office to Apple's iPad

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella brings Office to Apple's iPad
    In his first public appearance as the new Indian-American CEO of Microsoft Satya Nadella made a break from the company's long-standing Window-centric world view to unveil Office suite for rival Apple's popular tablet iPad.

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella brings Office to Apple's iPad