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Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology

  • P-ISSN1229-0653
  • KCI

Does Election Intensify Intergroup Conflict? Focusing on Age, Gender, and Regional Hate Speech in Social Media

Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology / Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology, (P)1229-0653;
2025, v.39 no.3, pp.431-441
https://doi.org/10.21193/kjspp.2025.39.3.008
Inyeong Lee (Department of Psychology, Sogang University)
Heungwoo Cheon (Department of Psychology, Sogang University)
Jinkyung Na (Department of Psychology, Sogang University)

Abstract

This study examines whether elections exacerbate intergroup conflicts by using text mining techniques. To this end, we collected social media data before and after the 2024 South Korean parliamentary election and analyzed changes in hate speech targeting key electoral conflict factors: age, gender, and region. Beta regression analysis revealed that hate speech against these groups significantly increased during the election year (2024) and on election day (April 10). Notably, on election day within the election year, hate speech targeting age, region, and gender increased, whereas no such change was observed in the non-election year. These findings suggest that elections, often referred to as the “flower of democracy,” may be associated with a rise in online hate speech. This study provides a foundational basis for developing intervention strategies to mitigate the spread of hate speech during election periods.

keywords
Election, Voting, Text Mining, Hate Speech, Intergroup Threat
Received
2025-04-09
Revised
2025-06-23
Accepted
2025-07-01
Published
2025-08-30

Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology