Abstract

A social bot is an intelligent computer program that acts like a human and carries out various activities in a social network. A Twitter bot is one of the most common forms of social bots. The detection of Twitter bots has become imperative to draw lines between real and unreal Twitter users. In this research study, the main aim is to detect Twitter bots based on diverse content-specific feature sets and explore the use of state-of-the-art machine learning classifiers. The real-world data from Twitter is scrapped using Twitter API and is pre-processed using standard procedure. To analyze the content of tweets, several feature sets are proposed, such as message-based, part-of-speech, special characters, and sentiment-based feature sets. Min-max normalization is considered for data normalization and then feature selection methods are applied to rank the top features within each feature set. For empirical analysis, robust machine learning algorithms such as deep learning (DL), multilayer perceptron (MLP), random forest (RF), naïve Bayes (NB), and rule-based classification (RBC) are applied. The performance evaluation based on standard metrics of precision, accuracy, recall, and f-measure reveals that the proposed approach outperforms the existing studies in the relevant literature. In addition, we explore the effectiveness of each feature set for the detection of Twitter bots.

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