229 research outputs found
A Survey on Visual Analytics of Social Media Data
The unprecedented availability of social media data offers substantial opportunities for data owners, system operators, solution providers, and end users to explore and understand social dynamics. However, the exponential growth in the volume, velocity, and variability of social media data prevents people from fully utilizing such data. Visual analytics, which is an emerging research direction, ha..
Detecting and Tracking the Spread of Astroturf Memes in Microblog Streams
Online social media are complementing and in some cases replacing
person-to-person social interaction and redefining the diffusion of
information. In particular, microblogs have become crucial grounds on which
public relations, marketing, and political battles are fought. We introduce an
extensible framework that will enable the real-time analysis of meme diffusion
in social media by mining, visualizing, mapping, classifying, and modeling
massive streams of public microblogging events. We describe a Web service that
leverages this framework to track political memes in Twitter and help detect
astroturfing, smear campaigns, and other misinformation in the context of U.S.
political elections. We present some cases of abusive behaviors uncovered by
our service. Finally, we discuss promising preliminary results on the detection
of suspicious memes via supervised learning based on features extracted from
the topology of the diffusion networks, sentiment analysis, and crowdsourced
annotations
Negative emotion under haze: an investigation based on the microblog and weather records of Tianjin, China
Nowadays, many big cities are suffering from heavy air pollution and continuous haze weather. Compared with the threat on physical health, the influence of haze on people’s mental health is much less discussed in the current literature. Emotion is one of the most important indicators of mental health. To understand the negative impact of haze weather on the emotion of the people, we conducted an investigation based on historical weather records and microblog data in Tianjin, China. Specifically, an emotional thesaurus was generated with a microblog corpus collected from sample data. Based on the thesaurus, the public emotion under haze was statistically described. Then, through correlation analysis and comparative study, the relation and seasonal variation of haze and negative emotion of the public were well discussed. According to the study results, there was indeed a correlation between haze and negative emotion of the public, but the strength of this relationship varied under different conditions. The level of air pollution and weather context were both important factors that influence the mental effects of haze, and diverse patterns of negative emotion expression were demonstrated in different seasons of a year. Finally, for the benefit of people’s mental health under haze, recommendations were given for haze control from the side of government
Using social media for air pollution detection-the case of Eastern China Smog
Air pollution has become an urgent issue that affecting public health and people’s daily life in China. Social media as potential air quality sensors to surveil air pollution is emphasized recently. In this research, we picked up a case-2013 Eastern China smog and focused on two of the most popular Chinese microblog platforms Sina Weibo and Tencent Weibo. The purpose of this study is to determine whether social media can be capable to be used as ‘sensors’ to monitor air pollution in China and to provide an innovative model for air pollution detection through social media. Based on that, we propose our research question, how a salient change of air quality expressed on social media discussions to reflect the extent of air pollution. Hence, our research (1) determine the correlation between the volume of air quality-related messages and observed Air quality index (AQI) with the help of time series analysis model; (2) investigate further the impact of a salient change of air quality on the relationship between the people’s subjective perceptions regarding to air pollution released on the Weibo and the extent of air pollution through a co-word network analysis model. Our study illustrates that the discussions on social media about air quality reflect the level of air pollution when the air quality changes saliently
Cashtag piggybacking: uncovering spam and bot activity in stock microblogs on Twitter
Microblogs are increasingly exploited for predicting prices and traded
volumes of stocks in financial markets. However, it has been demonstrated that
much of the content shared in microblogging platforms is created and publicized
by bots and spammers. Yet, the presence (or lack thereof) and the impact of
fake stock microblogs has never systematically been investigated before. Here,
we study 9M tweets related to stocks of the 5 main financial markets in the US.
By comparing tweets with financial data from Google Finance, we highlight
important characteristics of Twitter stock microblogs. More importantly, we
uncover a malicious practice - referred to as cashtag piggybacking -
perpetrated by coordinated groups of bots and likely aimed at promoting
low-value stocks by exploiting the popularity of high-value ones. Among the
findings of our study is that as much as 71% of the authors of suspicious
financial tweets are classified as bots by a state-of-the-art spambot detection
algorithm. Furthermore, 37% of them were suspended by Twitter a few months
after our investigation. Our results call for the adoption of spam and bot
detection techniques in all studies and applications that exploit
user-generated content for predicting the stock market
When Infodemic Meets Epidemic: a Systematic Literature Review
Epidemics and outbreaks present arduous challenges requiring both individual
and communal efforts. Social media offer significant amounts of data that can
be leveraged for bio-surveillance. They also provide a platform to quickly and
efficiently reach a sizeable percentage of the population, hence their
potential impact on various aspects of epidemic mitigation. The general
objective of this systematic literature review is to provide a methodical
overview of the integration of social media in different epidemic-related
contexts. Three research questions were conceptualized for this review,
resulting in over 10000 publications collected in the first PRISMA stage, 129
of which were selected for inclusion. A thematic method-oriented synthesis was
undertaken and identified 5 main themes related to social media enabled
epidemic surveillance, misinformation management, and mental health. Findings
uncover a need for more robust applications of the lessons learned from
epidemic post-mortem documentation. A vast gap exists between retrospective
analysis of epidemic management and result integration in prospective studies.
Harnessing the full potential of social media in epidemic related tasks
requires streamlining the results of epidemic forecasting, public opinion
understanding and misinformation propagation, all while keeping abreast of
potential mental health implications. Pro-active prevention has thus become
vital for epidemic curtailment and containment
Cybernationalism and cyberactivism in China
El nacionalismo en la era de Internet se está convirtiendo cada vez más en un factor esencial que influye en la agenda-setting de la sociedad china, asà como en las relaciones de China con los paÃses extranjeros, especialmente con Occidente. Para China, una mejor comprensión de la estructura teórica universal y de los patrones de comportamiento del nacionalismo facilitarÃa la articulación social general de esta tendencia y potenciarÃa su papel positivo en la agenda-setting social. Por otra parte, un estudio del cibernacionalismo chino basado en una perspectiva china en el mundo académico occidental es un intento de transculturación. Desde el punto de vista de las relaciones internacionales y la geopolÃtica actuales, que son bastante urgentes, este intento ayudarÃa a mejorar la compatibilidad de China con el actual orden mundial dominado por Occidente, a reducir la desinformación entre China y otros paÃses y a sentar las bases culturales e ideológicas para otras colaboraciones internacionales. Teniendo en cuenta el estado actual de la investigación sobre el nacionalismo chino y la naturaleza participativa de las masas del cibernacionalismo, esta disertación se centra en el cibernacionalismo en las tres partes siguientes. El primero es un estudio de los orÃgenes históricos del cibernacionalismo chino. Esta sección incluye tanto una exploración del consenso social en la antigua China como un estudio de la influencia del nacionalismo en la historia china moderna. El estudio de los orÃgenes históricos no sólo nos muestra la secuencia cronológica de la experiencia del desarrollo y la evolución tanto del proto-nacionalismo como del nacionalismo en China, sino que también revela un impulso decisivo para las reivindicaciones y comportamientos actuales del cibernacionalismo. La segunda parte trata del proceso de formación y ascenso del cibernacionalismo desde el siglo XXI. El importante antecedente del paso del nacionalismo al cibernacionalismo es el proceso de informatización de la sociedad china. Una vez completado el estudio de la situación básica de la sociedad china de Internet, especialmente el estudio de los medios sociales como espacio público, podemos vincular Internet con el nacionalismo y examinar el nuevo desarrollo del nacionalismo en la era de la participación de masas. El objetivo final es conectar el proto-nacionalismo, el nacionalismo y el cibernacionalismo, y seguir construyendo una comprensión del cibernacionalismo que sea coherente tanto con los principios universales del nacionalismo como con el contexto chino. Por último, validamos los resultados derivados del estudio anterior a través de la realidad social, es decir, estudiando las prácticas de ciberactivismo del cibernacionalismo para juzgar su suficiencia general asà como su validez. Llevaremos a cabo varios estudios de caso de natural language processing basados en big data para reproducir la lógica de comportamiento y el impacto real del ciberactivismo de la manera más cercana posible a la realidad de Internet, evitando al mismo tiempo los defectos de argumentación unilateral y de infrarrepresentación de los estudios de caso tradicionales.Nationalism in the Internet age is increasingly becoming an essential factor influencing agendasetting within Chinese society, as well as China’s relations with foreign countries, especially the West. For
China, a better understanding of the universal theoretical structure and behavioral patterns of nationalism
would facilitate the overall social articulation of this trend and enhance its positive role in social agenda
setting. On the other hand, a study of Chinese cybernationalism based on a Chinese perspective in western
academia is an attempt at transculturation. From the viewpoint of the current rather urgent international
relations and geopolitics, such an attempt would help to enhance China’s compatibility with the current
western-dominated world order, reduce misinformation between China and other countries, and lay the
cultural and ideological groundwork for various other international collaborations. Considering the current
state of Chinese nationalism research and the mass participatory nature of cybernationalism, this dissertation
focuses on cybernationalism in the following three parts.
The first is a study of the historical origins of Chinese cybernationalism. This section includes both
an exploration of the social consensus in ancient China and a survey of the influence of nationalism in modern
Chinese history. The historical origins study not only shows us the chronological sequence of experiencing
the development and evolution of both proto-nationalism and nationalism in China, but also reveals a decisive
impetus for the current claims and behaviors of cybernationalism.
The second part deals with the process of formation and rise of cybernationalism since the 21st
century. The important background for the move from nationalism to cybernationalism is the informatization
process of Chinese society. After we have completed the study of the basic situation of Chinese Internet
society, especially the study of social media as a public space, we can link the Internet with nationalism and
examine the new development of nationalism in the era of mass participation. The ultimate goal is to connect
the proto-nationalism, nationalism, cybernationalism, and furtherly construct an understanding of
cybernationalism that is consistent with both the universal principles of nationalism and the Chinese context.
Finally, we validate the results derived from the previous study through social reality, i.e., by
studying the cyberactivism practices of cybernationalism to judge its general sufficiency as well as validity.
We will conduct several natural language processing case studies based on big data to reproduce the
behavioral logic and actual impact of cyberactivism in the closest possible way to the Internet reality while
avoiding the unilateral argumentation and under-representation flaws of traditional case studies
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