Multilingual Analysis of Narrative Properties in Conspiracist vs Mainstream Telegram Channels

Katarina Laken, Matteo Melis, Sara Tonelli, Marcos Garcia


Abstract
Conspiracist narratives posit an omnipotent, evil group causing harm throughout domains. However, modern-day online conspiracism is often more erratic, consisting of loosely connected posts displaying a general anti-establishment attitude pervaded by negative emotions. We gather a dataset of 300 conspiracist and mainstream, Telegram channels in Italian and English and use the automatic extraction of entities and emotion detection to compare structural characteristics of both types of channels. We create a co-occurrence network of entities to analyze how the different types of channels introduce and use them across posts and topics. We find that conspiracist channels are characterized by anger. Moreover, co-occurrence networks of entities appearing in conspiracist channels are more dense. We theorize that this reflects a narrative structure where all actants are pushed into a single domain. Conspiracist channels disproportionately associate the most central group of entities with anger and fear. We do not find evidence that entities in conspiracist narratives occur across more topics. This could indicate an erratic type of online conspiracism where everything can be connected to everything and that is characterized by a high number of entities and high levels of anger.
Anthology ID:
2025.woah-1.41
Volume:
Proceedings of the The 9th Workshop on Online Abuse and Harms (WOAH)
Month:
August
Year:
2025
Address:
Vienna, Austria
Editors:
Agostina Calabrese, Christine de Kock, Debora Nozza, Flor Miriam Plaza-del-Arco, Zeerak Talat, Francielle Vargas
Venues:
WOAH | WS
SIG:
Publisher:
Association for Computational Linguistics
Note:
Pages:
426–457
Language:
URL:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/acl25-workshop-ingestion/2025.woah-1.41/
DOI:
Bibkey:
Cite (ACL):
Katarina Laken, Matteo Melis, Sara Tonelli, and Marcos Garcia. 2025. Multilingual Analysis of Narrative Properties in Conspiracist vs Mainstream Telegram Channels. In Proceedings of the The 9th Workshop on Online Abuse and Harms (WOAH), pages 426–457, Vienna, Austria. Association for Computational Linguistics.
Cite (Informal):
Multilingual Analysis of Narrative Properties in Conspiracist vs Mainstream Telegram Channels (Laken et al., WOAH 2025)
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PDF:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/acl25-workshop-ingestion/2025.woah-1.41.pdf
Supplementarymaterial:
 2025.woah-1.41.SupplementaryMaterial.zip
Supplementarymaterial:
 2025.woah-1.41.SupplementaryMaterial.zip