A Theory-based Deep-Learning Approach to Detecting Disinformation in Financial Social Media.
Wingyan ChungYinqiang ZhangJia PanPublished in: Information systems frontiers : a journal of research and innovation (2022)
The spreading of disinformation in social media threatens cybersecurity and undermines market efficiency. Detecting disinformation is challenging due to large volumes of social media content and a rapidly changing environment. This research developed and validated a theory-based, novel deep-learning approach (called TRNN) to disinformation detection. Grounded in social and psychological theories, TRNN uses deep-learning and data-centric augmentation to enhance disinformation detection in financial social media. Temporal and contextual information is encoded as specific knowledge about human-validated disinformation, which was identified from our unique collection of 745,139 financial social media messages about four U.S. high-tech company stocks and their fine-grained trading data. TRNN uses multiple series of long short-term memory (LSTM) recurrent neurons to learn dynamic and hidden patterns to support disinformation detection. Our experimental findings show that TRNN significantly outperformed widely-used machine learning techniques in terms of precision, recall, F-score and accuracy, achieving consistently better classification performance in disinformation detection. A case study of Apple Inc.'s stock price movement demonstrates the potential usability of TRNN for secure knowledge management. The research contributes to developing novel approach and model, producing new information systems artifacts and dataset, and providing empirical findings of detecting online disinformation.
Keyphrases
- social media
- health information
- deep learning
- machine learning
- artificial intelligence
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- healthcare
- label free
- real time pcr
- big data
- convolutional neural network
- electronic health record
- endothelial cells
- mental health
- air pollution
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- spinal cord
- childhood cancer
- affordable care act
- soft tissue