Fig. 2: ‘China’ as the centred and intermediated word in centrality-betweenness net-work. | Humanities and Social Sciences Communications

Fig. 2: ‘China’ as the centred and intermediated word in centrality-betweenness net-work.

From: Climate action contributor and carbon space appropriator: national image construction of China in dual-carbon commitment from Indian media’s perspective

Fig. 2

Each node in this figure corresponds to a high frequency word (30 in total) in Table 1, showing the centrality betweenness (in Jaccard index) of these words. The darker the colour of the node, the higher betweenness of the node word, which indicates the number of shortest paths for a node to traverse the network, meaning that the node bridges other nodes and reoccurred in significant contexts and topics in the corpus, i.e., China, India, emission, climate. The thicker edge indicates a stronger connection between the nodes and vice versa. MST in the figure means ‘minimum spanning tree’, which helps to understand which elements of a story are most closely linked, revealing the structure and focus of the corpus.

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