89 research outputs found

    Twitter and society

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    Detecting, Modeling, and Predicting User Temporal Intention

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    The content of social media has grown exponentially in the recent years and its role has evolved from narrating life events to actually shaping them. Unfortunately, content posted and shared in social networks is vulnerable and prone to loss or change, rendering the context associated with it (a tweet, post, status, or others) meaningless. There is an inherent value in maintaining the consistency of such social records as in some cases they take over the task of being the first draft of history as collections of these social posts narrate the pulse of the street during historic events, protest, riots, elections, war, disasters, and others as shown in this work. The user sharing the resource has an implicit temporal intent: either the state of the resource at the time of sharing, or the current state of the resource at the time of the reader \clicking . In this research, we propose a model to detect and predict the user\u27s temporal intention of the author upon sharing content in the social network and of the reader upon resolving this content. To build this model, we first examine the three aspects of the problem: the resource, time, and the user. For the resource we start by analyzing the content on the live web and its persistence. We noticed that a portion of the resources shared in social media disappear, and with further analysis we unraveled a relationship between this disappearance and time. We lose around 11% of the resources after one year of sharing and a steady 7% every following year. With this, we turn to the public archives and our analysis reveals that not all posted resources are archived and even they were an average 8% per year disappears from the archives and in some cases the archived content is heavily damaged. These observations prove that in regards to archives resources are not well-enough populated to consistently and reliably reconstruct the missing resource as it existed at the time of sharing. To analyze the concept of time we devised several experiments to estimate the creation date of the shared resources. We developed Carbon Date, a tool which successfully estimated the correct creation dates for 76% of the test sets. Since the resources\u27 creation we wanted to measure if and how they change with time. We conducted a longitudinal study on a data set of very recently-published tweet-resource pairs and recording observations hourly. We found that after just one hour, ~4% of the resources have changed by ≥30% while after a day the change rate slowed to be ~12% of the resources changed by ≥40%. In regards to the third and final component of the problem we conducted user behavioral analysis experiments and built a data set of 1,124 instances manually assigned by test subjects. Temporal intention proved to be a difficult concept for average users to understand. We developed our Temporal Intention Relevancy Model (TIRM) to transform the highly subjective temporal intention problem into the more easily understood idea of relevancy between a tweet and the resource it links to, and change of the resource through time. On our collected data set TIRM produced a significant 90.27% success rate. Furthermore, we extended TIRM and used it to build a time-based model to predict temporal intention change or steadiness at the time of posting with 77% accuracy. We built a service API around this model to provide predictions and a few prototypes. Future tools could implement TIRM to assist users in pushing copies of shared resources into public web archives to ensure the integrity of the historical record. Additional tools could be used to assist the mining of the existing social media corpus by derefrencing the intended version of the shared resource based on the intention strength and the time between the tweeting and mining

    Enhancing disaster situational awareness through scalable curation of social media

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    Online social media is today used during humanitarian disasters by victims, responders, journalists and others, to publicly exchange accounts of ongoing events, requests for help, aggregate reports, reflections and commentary. In many cases, incident reports become available on social media before being picked up by traditional information channels, and often include rich evidence such as photos and video recordings. However, individual messages are sparse in content and message inflow rates can reach hundreds of thousands of items per hour during large scale events. Current information management methods struggle to make sense of this vast body of knowledge, due to limitations in terms of accuracy and scalability of processing, summarization capabilities, organizational acceptance and even basic understanding of users’ needs. If solutions to these problems can be found, social media can be mined to offer disaster responders unprecedented levels of situational awareness. This thesis provides a first comprehensive overview of humanitarian disaster stakeholders and their information needs, against which the utility of the proposed and future information management solutions can be assessed. The research then shows how automated online textclustering techniques can provide report de-duplication, timely event detection, ranking and summarization of content in rapid social media streams. To identify and filter out reports that correspond to the information needs of specific stakeholders, crowdsourced information extraction is combined with supervised classification techniques to generalize human annotation behaviour and scale up processing capacity several orders of magnitude. These hybrid processing techniques are implemented in CrisisTracker, a novel software tool, and evaluated through deployment in a large-scale multi-language disaster information management setting. Evaluation shows that the proposed techniques can effectively make social media an accessible complement to currently relied-on information collection methods, which enables disaster analysts to detect and comprehend unfolding events more quickly, deeply and with greater coverage.Actualmente, m´ıdias sociais s˜ao utilizadas em crises humanit´arias por v´ıtimas, apoios de emergˆencia, jornalistas e outros, para partilhar publicamente eventos, pedidos ajuda, relat´orios, reflex˜oes e coment´arios. Frequentemente, relat´orios de incidentes est˜ao dispon´ıveis nestes servic¸o muito antes de estarem dispon´ıveis nos canais de informac¸˜ao comuns e incluem recursos adicionais, tais como fotografia e video. No entanto, mensagens individuais s˜ao escassas em conteu´do e o fluxo destas pode chegar aos milhares de unidades por hora durante grandes eventos. Actualmente, sistemas de gest˜ao de informac¸˜ao s˜ao ineficientes, em grande parte devido a limita¸c˜oes em termos de rigor e escalabilidade de processamento, sintetiza¸c˜ao, aceitac¸˜ao organizacional ou simplesmente falta de compreens˜ao das necessidades dos utilizadores. Se existissem solu¸c˜oes eficientes para extrair informa¸c˜ao de m´ıdias sociais em tempos de crise, apoios de emergˆencia teriam acesso a informac¸˜ao rigorosa, resultando em respostas mais eficientes. Esta tese cont´em a primeira lista exaustiva de parte interessada em ajuda humanit´aria e suas necessidades de informa¸c˜ao, v´alida para a utilizac¸˜ao do sistema proposto e futuras soluc¸˜oes. A investiga¸c˜ao nesta tese demonstra que sistemas de aglomera¸c˜ao de texto autom´atico podem remover redundˆancia de termos; detectar eventos; ordenar por relevˆancia e sintetizar conteu´do dinˆamico de m´ıdias sociais. Para identificar e filtrar relat´orios relevantes para diversos parte interessada, algoritmos de inteligˆencia artificial s˜ao utilizados para generalizar anotac¸˜oes criadas por utilizadores e automatizar consideravelmente o processamento. Esta solu¸c˜ao inovadora, CrisisTracker, foi testada em situa¸c˜oes de grande escala, em diversas l´ınguas, para gest˜ao de informa¸c˜ao em casos de crise humanit´aria. Os resultados demonstram que os m´etodos propostos podem efectivamente tornar a informa¸c˜ao de m´ıdias sociais acess´ıvel e complementam os m´etodos actuais utilizados para gest˜ao de informa¸c˜ao por analistas de crises, para detectar e compreender eventos eficientemente, com maior detalhe e cobertura

    A Survey of Social Network Forensics

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    Social networks in any form, specifically online social networks (OSNs), are becoming a part of our everyday life in this new millennium especially with the advanced and simple communication technologies through easily accessible devices such as smartphones and tablets. The data generated through the use of these technologies need to be analyzed for forensic purposes when criminal and terrorist activities are involved. In order to deal with the forensic implications of social networks, current research on both digital forensics and social networks need to be incorporated and understood. This will help digital forensics investigators to predict, detect and even prevent any criminal activities in different forms. It will also help researchers to develop new models / techniques in the future. This paper provides literature review of the social network forensics methods, models, and techniques in order to provide an overview to the researchers for their future works as well as the law enforcement investigators for their investigations when crimes are committed in the cyber space. It also provides awareness and defense methods for OSN users in order to protect them against to social attacks

    Using Social Media to Evaluate Public Acceptance of Infrastructure Projects

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    The deficit of infrastructure quality of the United States demands groundbreaking of more infrastructure projects. Despite the potential economic and social benefits brought by these projects, they could also negatively impact the community and the environment, which could in turn affect the implementation and operation of the projects. Therefore, measuring and monitoring public acceptance is critical to the success of infrastructure projects. However, current practices such as public hearings and opinion polls are slow and costly, hence are insufficient to provide satisfactory monitoring mechanism. Meanwhile, the development of state-of-the-art technologies such as social media and big data have provided people with unprecedented ways to express themselves. These platforms generate huge volumes of user-generated content, and have naturally become alternative sources of public opinion. This research proposes a framework and an analysis methodology to use big data from social media (e.g. the microblogging site Twitter) for project evaluation. The framework collects social media postings, analyzes public opinion towards infrastructure projects and builds multi-dimensional models around the big data. The interface and conceptual implementation of each component of the framework are discussed. This framework could be used as a supplement to traditional polls to provide a fast and cost-effective way for public opinion and project risk assessment. This research is followed by a case study applying the framework to a real-world infrastructure project to demonstrate the feasibility and comprehensiveness of the framework. The California High Speed Rail project is selected to be the object of study. It is an iconic and controversial large-scale infrastructure project that faced a lot of criticism, complaints and suggestions. Sentiment analysis, the most important type of analysis on the framework, is discussed concerning its application and implementation in the context of infrastructure projects. A public acceptance model for social media sentiment analysis is proposed and examined, and the best measurement of public acceptance is recommended. Moreover, the case study explores the driving force of the change in public acceptance: the social media events. Events are defined, evaluated, and an event influence quadrant is proposed to categorize and prioritize social media events. Furthermore, the individuals influencing the perceptions of these events, opinion leaders, are also modeled and identified. Three opinion leadership types are defined with top users in each type listed and discussed. A predictive model for opinion leader is also developed to identify opinion leaders using an a priori indicator. Finally, a user profiling model is established to describe social demographic characteristics of users, and each demographic feature is discussed in detail

    Assessing the social impacts of extreme weather events using social media

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    The frequency and severity of extreme weather events such as flooding, hurricanes/storms and heatwaves are increasing as a result of climate change. There is a need for information to better understand when, where and how these events are impacting people. However, there are currently limited sources of impact information beyond traditional meteorological observations. Social sensing, which is the use of unsolicited social media data to better understand real world events, is one method that may provide such information. Social sensing has successfully been used to detect earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, wildfires, heatwaves and other weather hazards. Here social sensing methods are adapted to explore potential for collecting impact information for meteorologists and decision makers concerned with extreme weather events. After a review of the literature, three experimental studies are presented. Social sensing is shown to be effective for detection of impacts of named storms in the UK and Ireland. Topics of discussion and sentiment are explored in the period before, during and after a storm event. Social sensing is also shown able to detect high-impact rainfall events worldwide, validating results against a manually curated database. Additional events which were not known to this database were found by social sensing. Finally, social sensing was applied to heatwaves in three European cities. Building on previous work on heatwaves in the UK, USA and Australia, the methods were extended to include impact phrases alongside hazard-related phrases, in three different languages (English, Dutch and Greek). Overall, social sensing is found to be a good source of impact information for organisations that need to better understand the impacts of extreme weather. The research described in this project has been commercialised for operational use by meteorological agencies in the UK, including the Met Office, Environment Agency and Natural Resources Wales.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC

    Participatory aid marketplace : designing online channels for digital humanitarians

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    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2013.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 215-236).Recent years have seen an increase in natural and man-made crises. Information and communication technologies are enabling citizens to contribute creative solutions and participate in crisis response in myriad new ways, but coordination of participatory aid projects remains an unsolved challenge. I present a wide-ranging case library of creative participatory aid responses and a framework to support investigation of this space. I then co-design a Marketplace platform with leading Volunteer & Technical Communities to aggregate participatory aid projects, connect skilled volunteers with relevant ways to help, and prevent fragmentation of efforts. The result is a prototype to support the growth of participatory aid, and a case library to improve understanding of the space. As the networked public takes a more active role in its recovery from crisis, this work will help guide the way forward with specific designs and general guidelines.by Matt Stempeck.S.M

    Democracy and Fake News

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    This book explores the challenges that disinformation, fake news, and post-truth politics pose to democracy from a multidisciplinary perspective. The authors analyse and interpret how the use of technology and social media as well as the emergence of new political narratives has been progressively changing the information landscape, undermining some of the pillars of democracy. The volume sheds light on some topical questions connected to fake news, thereby contributing to a fuller understanding of its impact on democracy. In the Introduction, the editors offer some orientating definitions of post-truth politics, building a theoretical framework where various different aspects of fake news can be understood. The book is then divided into three parts: Part I helps to contextualise the phenomena investigated, offering definitions and discussing key concepts as well as aspects linked to the manipulation of information systems, especially considering its reverberation on democracy. Part II considers the phenomena of disinformation, fake news, and post-truth politics in the context of Russia, which emerges as a laboratory where the phases of creation and diffusion of fake news can be broken down and analysed; consequently, Part II also reflects on the ways to counteract disinformation and fake news. Part III moves from case studies in Western and Central Europe to reflect on the methodological difficulty of investigating disinformation, as well as tackling the very delicate question of detection, combat, and prevention of fake news. This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of political science, law, political philosophy, journalism, media studies, and computer science, since it provides a multidisciplinary approach to the analysis of post-truth politics
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