From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence
While cancel culture has been taking shape as a widespread societal phenomenon in recent years, our understanding of it has typically been limited to individuals getting cancelled, usually in an online context. However, incidents of artificial intelligence (AI) getting cancelled have surfaced lately...
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2023
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1653392023-03-26T15:34:34Z From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence Koh, Shanice Jie Qing Tan, Justina Ann Qi Andrew Prahl Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information andrew.prahl@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Communication While cancel culture has been taking shape as a widespread societal phenomenon in recent years, our understanding of it has typically been limited to individuals getting cancelled, usually in an online context. However, incidents of artificial intelligence (AI) getting cancelled have surfaced lately, and this challenges our prior notions of cancel culture. Since AI is typically perceived as lacking some core human qualities, it remains a doubt whether it can be subjected to the same sociocultural phenomenon as humans. Thus, this paper leverages on a recent AI cancellation incident involving Nothing, Forever, an AI-generated parody of Seinfeld to investigate how AI cancellation is discussed on Twitter. Content analysis is performed on 734 relevant tweets to extract the main categories dominating the discourse. The results provide us with more insights regarding how people perceive AI and other central issues such as who should be responsible for AI output. Bachelor of Social Sciences in Psychology and Media Analytics 2023-03-24T04:54:10Z 2023-03-24T04:54:10Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Koh, S. J. Q. & Tan, J. A. Q. (2023). From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165339 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165339 en CS22-034 application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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Social sciences::Communication Koh, Shanice Jie Qing Tan, Justina Ann Qi From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence |
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While cancel culture has been taking shape as a widespread societal phenomenon in recent years, our understanding of it has typically been limited to individuals getting cancelled, usually in an online context. However, incidents of artificial intelligence (AI) getting cancelled have surfaced lately, and this challenges our prior notions of cancel culture. Since AI is typically perceived as lacking some core human qualities, it remains a doubt whether it can be subjected to the same sociocultural phenomenon as humans. Thus, this paper leverages on a recent AI cancellation incident involving Nothing, Forever, an AI-generated parody of Seinfeld to investigate how AI cancellation is discussed on Twitter. Content analysis is performed on 734 relevant tweets to extract the main categories dominating the discourse. The results provide us with more insights regarding how people perceive AI and other central issues such as who should be responsible for AI output. |
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Andrew Prahl |
author_facet |
Andrew Prahl Koh, Shanice Jie Qing Tan, Justina Ann Qi |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Koh, Shanice Jie Qing Tan, Justina Ann Qi |
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Koh, Shanice Jie Qing |
title |
From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence |
title_short |
From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence |
title_full |
From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence |
title_fullStr |
From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence |
title_full_unstemmed |
From nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence |
title_sort |
from nothing, forever to something, never: a content analysis of social media posts on the “cancellation” of artificial intelligence |
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Nanyang Technological University |
publishDate |
2023 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165339 |
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1761781390472380416 |