JavaScript isn't enabled in your browser, so this file can't be opened. Enable and reload.
This browser version is no longer supported. Please upgrade to a supported browser.
Learn More
Dismiss
2_Introduction_to_Network_Visualizations
Slideshow
Sign in
File
Edit
View
Help
Accessibility
Debug
Unsaved changes to Drive
Accessibility
View only
Rec
1
Welcome
to
the
research
project:
Evaluating
Network
Visualizations
of
Information
Operations
What
you’ll
need
to
do
-
View
this
‘How
to
Read
a
Network
Visualization’
video
and
slideshow
-
View
three
slideshows
and
three
videos
showing
how
a
network
of
Twitter
users
and
tweets
that
originated
in
Russia,
Venezuela,
and
China
evolved
-
Attend
a
1
hour
interview
in-person
or
online
-
Discuss
videos
VS
slideshows
-
Discuss
the
network
visualizations
of
state-backed
information
operations
2
Parts
of
a
network
visualization
A
network
visualization
is
made
up
of
dots
and
arrows
-
A
black
dot
is
an
inauthentic
account
which
Twitter
has
suspended
(they
believe
it
to
be
part
of
a
state-backed
information
operation)
-
A
red
dot
is
a
hashtag
an
inauthentic-account
wrote
in
a
tweet
-
An
arrow
connects
an
inauthentic
account
to
a
hashtag
they
tweeted
-
The
colour
of
the
arrow
denotes
the
year
the
inauthentic
account
was
created
on
Twitter
(
not
the
year
they
tweeted)
If
an
inauthentic
account
tweeted
a
hashtag
multiple
times,
they
appear
closer
together
in
the
network
#
inauthentic-account
hashtag
they
used
colour
=
account
creation
year
Welcome
to
the
research
project:
Evaluating
Network
Visualizations
of
Information
Operations
What
you’ll
need
to
do
-
View
this
‘How
to
Read
a
Network
Visualization’
video
and
slideshow
-
View
three
slideshows
and
three
videos
showing
how
a
network
of
Twitter
users
and
tweets
that
originated
in
Russia,
Venezuela,
and
China
evolved
-
Attend
a
1
hour
interview
in-person
or
online
-
Discuss
videos
VS
slideshows
-
Discuss
the
network
visualizations
of
state-backed
information
operations
This slide is skipped in slideshow mode
HTML view of the presentation
Turn on screen reader support
Since you last viewed
Since you last approved
Since approval started
Presenter view
Start slideshow with speaker notes and audience Q&A
Start from beginning
Ctrl+Shift+F5
Present using Chromecast
Presentation display options
New
Search the
m
enus
Alt+/
Slides
H
elp
T
raining
U
pdates
Help Slides imp
r
ove
Report
a
buse
P
rivacy Policy
Term
s
of Service
K
eyboard shortcuts
Ctrl+/
Verbalize to
s
creen reader
►
Go to
f
ilmstrip
Ctrl+Alt+Shift+F
Go to can
v
as
Ctrl+Alt+Shift+C
Go to speaker
n
otes
Ctrl+Alt+Shift+S
C
omments
►
M
isspelling
►
F
o
rmatting
►
Link copied to clipboard
Anyone with the link
Anyone who has the link can access. No sign-in required.
Copy link
Copy link to this time
Quick sharing actions
To enable screen reader support, press Ctrl+Alt+Z To learn about keyboard shortcuts, press Ctrl+slash