The Sound of Populism: Distinct Linguistic Features Across Populist Variants
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-10 收录
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https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/VJGS7H
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This study explores the sound of populism by integrating classic Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC) features, which capture the emotional and stylistic tones of language, with a fine-tuned RoBERTa model, a state-of-the-art context-aware language model trained to detect nuanced expressions of populism. This approach allows us to uncover the auditory dimensions of political rhetoric in U.S. presidential inaugural and State of the Union addresses. We examine how four key populist dimensions (i.e., left-wing, right-wing, anti-elitism, and people-centrism) manifest in the linguistic markers of speech, drawing attention to both commonalities and distinct tonal shifts across these variants. Our findings reveal that populist rhetoric consistently features a direct, assertive ``sound" that forges a connection with ``the people'' and constructs a charismatic leadership persona. However, this sound is not simply informal but strategically calibrated. Notably, right-wing populism and people-centrism exhibit a more emotionally charged discourse, resonating with themes of identity, grievance, and crisis, in contrast to the relatively restrained emotional tones of left-wing and anti-elitist expressions. Our study advances methods by integrating psycholinguistic features with transformer models and validating translation-based cross-linguistic analysis, and offers the first systematic analysis of U.S. presidential populism across four subtypes alongside a reproducible framework for quantitative research.
创建时间:
2026-01-21



