Tracking the Temporal Dynamics of News Coverage of Catastrophic and Violent Events
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v20i1.42801Abstract
The modern news cycle has been fundamentally reshaped by the rapid exchange of information online. As a result, media framing shifts dynamically as new information, political responses, and social reactions emerge. Understanding how these narratives form, propagate, and evolve is essential for interpreting public discourse during moments of crisis. In this study, we examine the temporal and semantic dynamics of reporting for violent and catastrophic events using a large-scale corpus of 126,602 news articles collected from online publishers. We quantify narrative change through publication volume, semantic drift, semantic dispersion, and term relevance. Our results show that sudden events of impact exhibit structured and predictable news-cycle patterns characterized by rapid surges in coverage, early semantic drift, and gradual declines toward the baseline. In addition, our results indicate the terms that are driving the temporal patterns.Downloads
Published
2026-05-25
How to Cite
Lugos, E. N., & Gruppi, M. (2026). Tracking the Temporal Dynamics of News Coverage of Catastrophic and Violent Events. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 20(1), 3018–3023. https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v20i1.42801
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Section
Poster Papers