In the last few years, microblogging platforms such as Twitter have given
rise to a deluge of textual data that can be used for the analysis of informal
communication between millions of individuals. In this work, we propose an
information-theoretic approach to geographic language variation using a corpus
based on Twitter. We test our models with tens of concepts and their associated
keywords detected in Spanish tweets geolocated in Spain. We employ
dialectometric measures (cosine similarity and Jensen-Shannon divergence) to
quantify the linguistic distance on the lexical level between cells created in
a uniform grid over the map. This can be done for a single concept or in the
general case taking into account an average of the considered variants. The
latter permits an analysis of the dialects that naturally emerge from the data.
Interestingly, our results reveal the existence of two dialect macrovarieties.
The first group includes a region-specific speech spoken in small towns and
rural areas whereas the second cluster encompasses cities that tend to use a
more uniform variety. Since the results obtained with the two different metrics
qualitatively agree, our work suggests that social media corpora can be
efficiently used for dialectometric analyses.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. Accepted to VarDial 201