Abstract

Social media bots pose potential threats to the online environment, and the continuously evolving anti-detection technologies require bot detection methods to be more reliable and general. Current detection methods encounter challenges, including limited generalization ability, susceptibility to evasion in traditional feature engineering, and insufficient exploration of user relationships. To tackle these challenges, this paper proposes MRLBot, a social media bot detection framework based on unsupervised representation learning. We design a behavior representation learning model that utilizes Transformer and a CNN encoder–decoder to simultaneously extract global and local features from behavioral information. Furthermore, a network representation learning model is proposed that introduces intra- and outer-community-oriented random walks to learn structural features and community connections from the relationship graph. Finally, the behavioral representation and relationship representation learning models are combined to generate fused representations for bot detection. The experimental results of four publicly available social network datasets demonstrate that the proposed method has certain advantages over state-of-the-art detection methods in this field.

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