Abstract:The proliferation of online news enables potential widespread publication of perceived low-quality news headlines/links. As a result, we investigated whether it was possible to automatically distinguish perceived lower-quality news headlines/links from perceived higher-quality headlines/links. We evaluated twelve machine learning models on a binary, balanced dataset of 57,544,214 worldwide news website links/headings from 2018-2024 (28,772,107 per class) with 115 extracted linguistic features. Binary labels for each text were derived from scores based on expert consensus regarding the respective news domain quality. Traditional ensemble methods, particularly the bagging classifier, had strong performance (88.1% accuracy, 88.3% F1, 80/20 train/test split). Fine-tuned DistilBERT achieved the highest accuracy (90.3%, 80/20 train/test split) but required more training time. The results suggest that both NLP features with traditional classifiers and deep learning models can effectively differentiate perceived news headline/link quality, with some trade-off between predictive performance and train time.
Abstract:The release of advanced Large Language Models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT and Copilot is changing the way text is created and may influence the content that we find on the web. This study investigated whether the release of these two popular LLMs coincided with a change in writing style in headlines and links on worldwide news websites. 175 NLP features were obtained for each text in a dataset of 451 million headlines/links. An interrupted time series analysis was applied for each of the 175 NLP features to evaluate whether there were any statistically significant sustained changes after the release dates of ChatGPT and/or Copilot. There were a total of 44 features that did not appear to have any significant sustained change after the release of ChatGPT/Copilot. A total of 91 other features did show significant change with ChatGPT and/or Copilot although significance with earlier control LLM release dates (GPT-1/2/3, Gopher) removed them from consideration. This initial analysis suggests these language models may have had a limited impact on the style of individual news headlines/links, with respect to only some NLP measures.