Edwards, David Linville2024-07-302024-07-302024-07-29vt_gsexam:41271https://hdl.handle.net/10919/120751Recent studies indicate that Americans have grown increasingly divided and polarized in recent years cite{boxell2022cross}, cite{hawdon2020social}. This research aims to describe and measure polarization trends across a historical archive of US-based, primarily regional, newspapers. The newspapers chosen are from various US markets to capture any regional differences in the discussion of issues/topics. Our modeling approach employs the Structural Topic Model (STM) to identify topics within a given corpus and measure the tonal differences of articles discussing the same topic. Specifically, we use the STM to infer potentially related articles and a sentiment analyzer called VADER to identify topics with a high level of semantic disparity. Using this method, we assess the polarization of developing and evolving topics, such as sports, politics, and entertainment, and compare how polarization between and within these topics has changed over time. Through this, we create topic-specific sentiment distributions, referred to as polarization distributions. We conclude by demonstrating the usefulness of these distributions in identifying polarization and showing how high polarization aligns with significant social events.ETDenIn CopyrightClusteringTopic MatchingSentiment DifferencesQuantifying Changes in Social Polarization Over Time and RegionDissertation