4.7 Article

Deep neural networks for bot detection

Journal

INFORMATION SCIENCES
Volume 467, Issue -, Pages 312-322

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ins.2018.08.019

Keywords

Social media networks; Web and social media; Social bots; Deep learning; Deep neural networks

Funding

  1. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) [FA9550-17-1-0327]
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) [W911NF-17-C-0094]

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The problem of detecting bots, automated social media accounts governed by software but disguising as human users, has strong implications. For example, bots have been used to sway political elections by distorting online discourse, to manipulate the stock market, or to push anti-vaccine conspiracy theories that may have caused health epidemics. Most techniques proposed to date detect bots at the account level, by processing large amounts of social media posts, and leveraging information from network structure, temporal dynamics, sentiment analysis, etc. In this paper, we propose a deep neural network based on contextual long short-term memory (LSTM) architecture that exploits both content and metadata to detect bots at the tweet level: contextual features are extracted from user metadata and fed as auxiliary input to LSTM deep nets processing the tweet text. Another contribution that we make is proposing a technique based on synthetic minority oversampling to generate a large labeled dataset, suitable for deep nets training, from a minimal amount of labeled data (roughly 3000 examples of sophisticated Twitter hots). We demonstrate that, from just one single tweet, our architecture can achieve high classification accuracy (AUC > 96%) in separating bots from humans. We apply the same architecture to account-level bot detection, achieving nearly perfect classification accuracy (AUC > 99%). Our system outperforms previous state of the art while leveraging a small and interpretable set of features, yet requiring minimal training data. (C) 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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