Score: 0

A Computer Vision Based Proxy for Political Polarization in Religious Countries: A Turkiye Case Study

Published: November 5, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2511.03088v1

By: Liangze Ke

Potential Business Impact:

Shows how far apart groups are, affecting votes.

Business Areas:
Image Recognition Data and Analytics, Software

This paper examines a novel proxy for political polarization, initially proposed by Caliskan et al., which estimates intergroup distances using computer vision. Analyzing 1,400+ YouTube videos with advanced object detection, their study quantifies demographic and religious divides in Turkiye, a deeply polarized nation. Our findings reveal strong correlations between intergroup distances and electoral polarization, measured via entropy-based voting metrics weighted by religiosity and political inclination. Two key insights emerge: (1) Greater distances between religious and nonreligious individuals (NRP vs RP) heighten electoral entropy, underscoring sociocultural fragmentation. (2) Intragroup diversity among nonreligious individuals (NRP vs NRP) stabilizes polarization, aligning with Axelrod's cultural dissemination model. This research advances computational social science and economics by showing that physical distancing serves as a scalable proxy for polarization, complementing traditional economic indicators.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Page Count
44 pages

Category
Economics:
General Economics