Abstract
Recent decades have witnessed online social media being a big-data window for testifying conventional social theories quantitatively and exploring much detailed human behavioral patterns. In this paper, by tracing the emoticon use in Weibo, a group of hidden “ambivalent users” are disclosed for frequently posting ambivalent tweets containing both positive and negative emotions. Further investigation reveals that this ambivalent expression could be a novel indicator of many unusual social behaviors. For instance, ambivalent users with the female as the majority like to make a sound in midnights and at weekends. They mention their close friends frequently in ambivalent tweets, which attract more replies and serve as a more private communication way. Ambivalent users also respond differently to public affairs from others and demonstrate more interests in entertainment and sports events. Moreover, the sentiment shift in ambivalent tweets is more evident than usual and exhibits a clear “negative to positive” pattern. The above observations, though being promiscuous seemingly, actually point to the self-regulation of negative mood in Weibo, which could find its basis from the traditional emotion management theories in sociology but makes an important extension to the online environment in this study. Finally, as an interesting corollary, ambivalent users are found connected with compulsive buyers and turn out to be perfect targets for online marketing.
Highlights
Emotional expression is a psychological behavior with the purpose of communicating affective states between different individuals
It is interesting that nearly 1.9% of the emotional tweets on Weibo are ambivalent, but the figure reduces to 1.1% for Twitter, indicating stronger inclination of Chinese Weibo users for ambivalent expression
We focus on the ambivalent users on Weibo
Summary
Emotional expression is a psychological behavior with the purpose of communicating affective states between different individuals. This behavior could be either verbal or nonverbal, including texts, voice, face expressions and body languages [1]. In the epoch of the Internet, tremendous developments of online social media provide abundant innovative and powerful means of information exchange, bringing unprecedented richness and diversity to the forms of emotional expression. Among these new forms, the emoticon is becoming more and more popular with the rapid growth of Weibo, a Twitter-like service in China. An emoticon is a small image used to convey extra meaning in a statement outside of written texts and derives its name from a PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0147079 January 22, 2016
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