How Growing Toxicity Manifests: A Topic Trajectory Analysis of U.S. Immigration Discourse on Social Media

Authors

  • Una Joh Syracuse University
  • Yiqi Li Syracuse University
  • Jeff Hemsley Syracuse University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v20i1.42686

Abstract

In the online public sphere, discussions about immigration often become increasingly fractious, marked by toxic language and polarization. Drawing on 4 million X posts over six months, we combine a user- and topic-centric approach to study how shifts in toxicity manifest as topical shifts. Our topic discovery method, which leverages instruction-based embeddings and recursive HDBSCAN, uncovers 157 fine-grained subtopics within the U.S. immigration discourse. We focus on users in four groups: those with increasing toxicity, those with decreasing toxicity, and two reference groups with no significant toxicity trend but matched toxicity levels. Treating each posting history as a trajectory through a five-dimensional topic space, we compare average group trajectories using permutational MANOVA. Our findings show that users with increasing toxicity drift toward alarmist, fear-based frames, whereas those with decreasing toxicity pivot toward legal and policy-focused themes. Both patterns diverge statistically significantly from their reference groups. This pipeline, which combines hierarchical topic discovery with trajectory analysis, offers a replicable method for studying dynamic conversations around social issues at scale.

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Published

2026-05-25

How to Cite

Joh, U., Li, Y., & Hemsley, J. (2026). How Growing Toxicity Manifests: A Topic Trajectory Analysis of U.S. Immigration Discourse on Social Media. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 20(1), 1129–1158. https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v20i1.42686