7 research outputs found

    Inferring user interests in microblogging social networks: a survey

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    With the growing popularity of microblogging services such as Twitter in recent years, an increasing number of users are using these services in their daily lives. The huge volume of information generated by users raises new opportunities in various applications and areas. Inferring user interests plays a significant role in providing personalized recommendations on microblogging services, and also on third-party applications providing social logins via these services, especially in cold-start situations. In this survey, we review user modeling strategies with respect to inferring user interests from previous studies. To this end, we focus on four dimensions of inferring user interest profiles: (1) data collection, (2) representation of user interest profiles, (3) construction and enhancement of user interest profiles, and (4) the evaluation of the constructed profiles. Through this survey, we aim to provide an overview of state-of-the-art user modeling strategies for inferring user interest profiles on microblogging social networks with respect to the four dimensions. For each dimension, we review and summarize previous studies based on specified criteria. Finally, we discuss some challenges and opportunities for future work in this research domain

    Characterizing silent users in social media communities

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    Silent users often constitute a significant proportion of an online user-generated content system. In the context of social media such as Twitter, users can opt to be silent all or most of the time. They are often called the invisible participants or lurkers. As lurkers contribute little to the online content, existing analysis often overlooks their presence and voices. However, we argue that understanding lurkers is important in many applications such as recommender systems, targeted advertising, and social sensing. This research therefore seeks to characterize lurkers in social media and propose methods to profile them. We examine 18 weeks of tweets generated by two Twitter communities consisting of more than 110K and 114K users respectively. We find that there are many lurkers in the two communities, and the proportion of lurkers in each community changes with time.We also show that by leveraging lurkers' neighbor content, we are able to profile them with accuracy comparable to that of profiling active users. It suggests that user generated content can be utilized for profiling lurkers and lurkers in Twitter are after all not that ``invisible''

    SocialLink: exploiting graph embeddings to link DBpedia entities to Twitter profiles

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    SocialLink is a project designed to match social media profiles on Twitter to corresponding entities in DBpedia. Built to bridge the vibrant Twitter social media world and the Linked Open Data cloud, SocialLink enables knowledge transfer between the two, both assisting Semantic Web practitioners in better harvesting the vast amounts of information available on Twitter and allowing leveraging of DBpedia data for social media analysis tasks. In this paper, we further extend the original SocialLink approach by exploiting graph-based features based on both DBpedia and Twitter, represented as graph embeddings learned from vast amounts of unlabeled data. The introduction of such new features required to redesign our deep neural network-based candidate selection algorithm and, as a result, we experimentally demonstrate a significant improvement of the performances of SocialLink

    Association Rules Mining among Interests and Applications for Users on Social Networks

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    Interest is an important concept in psychology and pedagogy and is widely studied in many fields. Especially in recent years, the widespread use of many interest-based recommendation systems has greatly promoted research on interest modeling and mining on social networks. However, the existing studies have rarely tried to explore the relationships among interests and their application value, and most similar studies analyze user behavior data. In this paper, we propose and verify two hypotheses about the interests of social network users. We then use association rules to mine users' interests from LinkedIn users' profiles. Finally, based on the interest association rules and user interest distribution on Twitter, we design an approach to mine interests for Twitter users and conduct two experiments to systematically demonstrate the approach's effectiveness. According to our research, we found that there are a large number of association rules between human interests. These rules play a considerable role in our method of interest mining. Our research work not only provides new ideas for interest mining but also reveals the internal relationship between interest and its application value. The research work has certain theoretical and practical value

    Quantifying & characterizing information diets of social media users

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    An increasing number of people are relying on online social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook to consume news and information about the world around them. This change has led to a paradigm shift in the way news and information is exchanged in our society – from traditional mass media to online social media. With the changing environment, it’s essential to study the information consumption of social media users and to audit how automated algorithms (like search and recommendation systems) are modifying the information that social media users consume. In this thesis, we fulfill this high-level goal with a two-fold approach. First, we propose the concept of information diets as the composition of information produced or consumed. Next, we quantify the diversity and bias in the information diets that social media users consume via the three main consumption channels on social media platforms: (a) word of mouth channels that users curate for themselves by creating social links, (b) recommendations that platform providers give to the users, and (c) search systems that users use to find interesting information on these platforms. We measure the information diets of social media users along three different dimensions of topics, geographic sources, and political perspectives. Our work is aimed at making social media users aware of the potential biases in their consumed diets, and at encouraging the development of novel mechanisms for mitigating the effects of these biases.Immer mehr Menschen verwenden soziale Medien, z.B. Twitter und Facebook, als Quelle für Nachrichten und Informationen aus ihrem Umfeld. Diese Entwicklung hat zu einem Paradigmenwechsel hinsichtlich der Art undWeise, wie Informationen und Nachrichten in unserer Gesellschaft ausgetauscht werden, geführt – weg von klassischen Massenmedien hin zu internetbasierten Sozialen Medien. Angesichts dieser veränderten (Informations-) Umwelt ist es von entscheidender Bedeutung, den Informationskonsum von Social Media-Nutzern zu untersuchen und zu prüfen, wie automatisierte Algorithmen (z.B. Such- und Empfehlungssysteme) die Informationen verändern, die Social Media- Nutzer aufnehmen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird diese Aufgabenstellung wie folgt angegangen: Zunächst wird das Konzept der “Information Diets” eingeführt, das eine Zusammensetzung aus produzierten und konsumierten Social Media-Inhalten darstellt. Als nächstes werden die Vielfalt und die Verzerrung (der sogenannte “Bias”) der “Information Diets” quantifiziert die Social Media-Nutzer über die drei hauptsächlichen Social Media- Kanäle konsumieren: (a) persönliche Empfehlungen und Auswahlen, die die Nutzer manuell pflegen und wodurch sie soziale Verbindungen (social links) erzeugen, (b) Empfehlungen, die dem Nutzer von der Social Media-Plattform bereitgestellt werden und (c) Suchsysteme der Plattform, die die Nutzer für ihren Informationsbedarf verwenden. Die “Information Diets” der Social Media-Nutzer werden hierbei anhand der drei Dimensionen Themen, geographische Lage und politische Ansichten gemessen. Diese Arbeit zielt zum einen darauf ab, Social Media-Nutzer auf die möglichen Verzerrungen in ihrer “Information Diet” aufmerksam zu machen. Des Weiteren soll diese Arbeit auch dazu anregen, neuartige Mechanismen und Algorithmen zu entwickeln, um solche Verzerrungen abzuschwächen

    User Behavior Mining in Microblogging

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    Study on open science: The general state of the play in Open Science principles and practices at European life sciences institutes

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    Nowadays, open science is a hot topic on all levels and also is one of the priorities of the European Research Area. Components that are commonly associated with open science are open access, open data, open methodology, open source, open peer review, open science policies and citizen science. Open science may a great potential to connect and influence the practices of researchers, funding institutions and the public. In this paper, we evaluate the level of openness based on public surveys at four European life sciences institute
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