"Dummy Grandpa, Do You Know Anything?": Identifying and Characterizing Ad Hominem Fallacy Usage in the Wild

Authors

  • Utkarsh Patel Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
  • Animesh Mukherjee Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
  • Mainack Mondal Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v17i1.22180

Keywords:

Web and Social Media, Qualitative and quantitative studies of social media, Social network analysis; communities identification; expertise and authority discovery, Trend identification and tracking; time series forecasting

Abstract

Today, participating in discussions on online forums is extremely commonplace and these discussions have started rendering a strong influence on the overall opinion of online users. Naturally, twisting the flow of the argument can have a strong impact on the minds of naive users, which in the long run might have socio-political ramifications, for example, winning an election or spreading targeted misinformation. Thus, these platforms are potentially highly vulnerable to malicious players who might act individually or as a cohort to breed fallacious arguments with a motive to sway public opinion. Ad hominem arguments are one of the most effective forms of such fallacies. Although a simple fallacy, it is effective enough to sway public debates in offline world and can be used as a precursor to shutting down the voice of opposition by slander. In this work, we take a first step in shedding light on the usage of ad hominem fallacies in the wild. First, we build a powerful ad hominem detector based on transformer architecture with high accuracy (F1 more than 83%, showing a significant improvement over prior work), even for datasets for which annotated instances constitute a very small fraction. We then used our detector on 265k arguments collected from the online debate forum – CreateDebate. Our crowdsourced surveys validate our in-the-wild predictions on CreateDebate data (94% match with manual annotation). Our analysis revealed that a surprising 31.23% of CreateDebate content contains ad hominem fallacy, and a cohort of highly active users post significantly more ad hominem to suppress opposing views. Then, our temporal analysis revealed that ad hominem argument usage increased significantly since the 2016 US Presidential election, not only for topics like Politics, but also for Science and Law. We conclude by discussing important implications of our work to detect and defend against ad hominem fallacies.

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Published

2023-06-02

How to Cite

Patel, U., Mukherjee, A., & Mondal, M. (2023). "Dummy Grandpa, Do You Know Anything?": Identifying and Characterizing Ad Hominem Fallacy Usage in the Wild. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 17(1), 698-709. https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v17i1.22180