Yiwen Ma’s scientific contributions

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Figure 1: Examples of Expert Quotes. Examples capture three varieties of quote structure. RSPEECH (Reported Speech) is the portion of the quote containing an exact quote or reconstruction of what the speaker previously said. RVERB (Reporting Verb) refers to the verb introducing or concluding reported speech ("say", "said", "explains", etc.). PERSON refers to the speaker of the (reported) quote. ORG refers to the organization affiliated with the speaker. Quotes are considered expert quotes if it has the presence of RSPEECH, RVERB, PERSON and ORG. We consider a sentence as containing both RSPEECH and RVERB if it contains one of 262 Reporting Verbs, as a Reporting Verb implies the presence of Reported Speech. We use Named Entity Recognition (NER) to determine whether a sentence features a PERSON and ORG.
Figure 2: Gender bias in news. Percentage of men and women in all
Figure 3: Gender Composition by Organization. Gender distribution separated by type of organization. Quotes matched to organization types by fuzzy string matching to databases of organization names (Times Higher Educations' 2015 World University Rankings, Index of Federal Departments and Agencies, and On Think Tanks). Error bars determined through bootstrapping 1,000 times. All organization types exhibit gender bias, with federal bodies containing the lowest proportion of women.
Figure 4: Preferred Organization Type for Expertise. Distribution of organization types affiliated with news sources in expert quotes. Sources are listed from top to bottom by political leaning reported in Media Bias Fact Check. Across the board, Federal Bodies are the most common type of expertise, though The New York Times has lowest proportion. Breitbart News is the only news outlet with higher use of think tanks than academic institutions.
Fig. 5 shows gender bias across the ideological spectrum of news outlets, where HUFF, CNN and NYT are classified as liberal (leftleaning) sources, and NYP, FOX, and BREIT as conservative (rightleaning), as reported in Media Bias Fact Check 5 . The effect of news

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Gender and Prestige Bias in Coronavirus News Reporting
  • Preprint
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January 2023

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Yiwen Ma

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Journalists play a vital role in surfacing issues of societal importance, but their choices of what to highlight and who to interview are influenced by societal biases. In this work, we use natural language processing tools to measure these biases in a large corpus of news articles about the Covid-19 pandemic. Specifically, we identify when experts are quoted in news and extract their names and institutional affiliations. We enrich the data by classifying each expert's gender, the type of organization they belong to, and for academic institutions, their ranking. Our analysis reveals disparities in the representation of experts in news. We find a substantial gender gap, where men are quoted three times more than women. The gender gap varies by partisanship of the news source, with conservative media exhibiting greater gender bias. We also identify academic prestige bias, where journalists turn to experts from highly-ranked academic institutions more than experts from less prestigious institutions, even if the latter group has more public health expertise. Liberal news sources exhibit slightly more prestige bias than conservative sources. Equality of representation is essential to enable voices from all groups to be heard. By auditing bias, our methods help identify blind spots in news coverage.

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