• Title/Summary/Keyword: tweets

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Impact of Tweets on Box Office Revenue: Focusing on When Tweets are Written

  • Baek, Hyunmi;Ahn, Joongho;Oh, Sehwan
    • ETRI Journal
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    • v.36 no.4
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    • pp.581-590
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    • 2014
  • This study investigates the impact of tweets on box office revenue. Specifically, the study focuses on the times when tweets were written by examining the impact of pre- and post-consumption tweets on box office revenue; an examination that is based on Expectation Confirmation Theory. The study also investigates the impact of intention tweets versus subjective tweets and the impact of negative tweets on box office revenue. Targeting 120 movies released in the US between February and August 2012, this study collected tweet information on a daily basis from two weeks before the opening until the closing and box office revenue information. The results indicate that the disconfirmation that occurs in relation to the total number of pre-consumption tweets for a movie has a negative impact on box office revenue. This premise suggests that the formation of higher expectations of a movie does not always result in positive results in situations where tweets on perceived movie quality after watching spread rapidly. This study also reveals that intention tweets have stronger effects on box office revenue than subjective tweets.

Social Media Analytics to Understand the Construction Industry Sentiments

  • Shrestha, K. Joseph;Mani, Nirajan;Kisi, Krishna P.;Abdelaty, Ahmed
    • International conference on construction engineering and project management
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    • 2022.06a
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    • pp.712-720
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    • 2022
  • The use of social media to disseminate news and interact with project stakeholders is increasing over time in the construction industry. Such social media data can be analyzed to get useful insights of the industry such as demands of new housing construction and satisfaction of construction workers. However, there has been a limited attempts to analyze social media data related to the construction industry. The objective of this study is to collect and analyze construction related tweets to understand the overall sentiments of individuals and organizations about the construction industry. The study collected 87,244 tweets from April 6, 2020, to April 13, 2020, which had hashtags relevant to the construction industry. The tweets were then analyzed to evaluate its sentiments polarity (positive or negative) and sentiment intensity or scores (-1 to +1). Descriptive statistics were produced for the tweets and the sentiment scores were visualized in a scatterplot to show the trend of the sentiment scores over time. The results shows that the overall sentiment score of all the tweets was slightly positive (0.0365). Negative tweets were retweeted and marked as favorite by more users on average than the positive ones. More specifically, the tweets with negative sentiments were retweeted by 2,802 users on average compared to the tweets with positive sentiments (247 average retweet count). This study can potentially be expanded in the future to produce a real time indicator of the construction market industry such as the increased availability of construction jobs, improved wage rates, and recession.

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Natural Language Processing-based Personalized Twitter Recommendation System (자연어 처리 기반 맞춤형 트윗 추천 시스템)

  • Lee, Hyeon-Chang;Yu, Dong-Pil;Jung, Ga-Bin;Nam, Yong-Wook;Kim, Yong-Hyuk
    • Journal of the Korea Convergence Society
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    • v.9 no.12
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    • pp.39-45
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    • 2018
  • Twitter users use 'Following', 'Retweet' and so on to find tweets that they are interested in. However, it is difficult for users to find tweets that are of interest to them on Twitter, which has more than 300 million users. In this paper, we developed a customized tweet recommendation system to resolve it. First, we gather current trends to collect tweets that are worth recommending to users and popular tweets that talk about trends. Later, to analyze users and recommend customized tweets, the users' tweets and the collected tweets are categorized. Finally, using Web service, we recommend tweets that match with user categorization and users whose interests match. Consequentially, we recommended 67.2% of proper tweet.

Who are Tweeting Research Articles and Why?

  • Htoo, Tint Hla Hla;Na, Jin-Cheon
    • Journal of Information Science Theory and Practice
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    • v.5 no.3
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    • pp.48-60
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    • 2017
  • The purpose of this paper is to understand the profiles of users and their motivations in sharing research articles on Twitter. The goal is to contribute to the understanding of Twitter as a new altmetric measure for assessing impact of research articles. In this paper, we extended the previous study of tweet motivations by finding out the profiles of twitter users. In particular, we examined six characteristics of users: gender, geographic distribution, academic, non-academic, individual, and organization. Out of several, we would like to highlight here three key findings. First, a great majority of users (86%) were from North America and Europe indicating the possibility that, if in general, tweets for research articles are mainly in English, Twitter as an alternative metric has a Western bias. Second, several previous altmetrics studies suggested that tweets, and altmetrics in general, do not indicate scholarly impact due to their low correlation with citation counts. This study provides further details in this aspect by revealing that most tweets (77%) were by individual users, 67% of whom were nonacademic. Therefore, tweets mostly reflect impact of research articles on the general public, rather than on academia. Finally, analysis from profiles and motivations showed that the majority of tweets (from 42% to 57%) in all user types highlighted the summary or findings of the article indicating that tweets are a new way of communicating research findings.

Twitter Crawling System

  • Ganiev, Saydiolim;Nasridinov, Aziz;Byun, Jeong-Yong
    • Journal of Multimedia Information System
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    • v.2 no.3
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    • pp.287-294
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    • 2015
  • We are living in epoch of information when Internet touches all aspects of our lives. Therefore, it provides a plenty of services each of which benefits people in different ways. Electronic Mail (E-mail), File Transfer Protocol (FTP), Voice/Video Communication, Search Engines are bright examples of Internet services. Between them Social Network Services (SNS) continuously gain its popularity over the past years. Most popular SNSs like Facebook, Weibo and Twitter generate millions of data every minute. Twitter is one of SNS which allows its users post short instant messages. They, 100 million, posted 340 million tweets per day (2012)[1]. Often big amount of data contains lots of noisy data which can be defined as uninteresting and unclassifiable data. However, researchers can take advantage of such huge information in order to analyze and extract meaningful and interesting features. The way to collect SNS data as well as tweets is handled by crawlers. Twitter crawler has recently emerged as a great tool to crawl Twitter data as well as tweets. In this project, we develop Twitter Crawler system which enables us to extract Twitter data. We implemented our system in Java language along with MySQL. We use Twitter4J which is a java library for communicating with Twitter API. The application, first, connects to Twitter API, then retrieves tweets, and stores them into database. We also develop crawling strategies to efficiently extract tweets in terms of time and amount.

South Korean Culture Goes Latin America: Social network analysis of Kpop Tweets in Mexico

  • Choi, Seong Cheol;Meza, Xanat Vargas;Park, Han Woo
    • International Journal of Contents
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.36-42
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    • 2014
  • Previous studies of the Korean wave have focused mainly on fan clubs by taking an ethnographic approach in the context of countries in Southeast Asia and, in a minor extension, Europe. This study fills the gap in the literature by providing a social network analysis of Tweets in the context of Mexico. We used the Twitter API in order to collect Twitter comments with the hashtag #kpop from March to August 2012, analyzing them with a set of webometric methodologies. The results indicate that #kpop power Twitterians in Mexico were more likely to be related to the public television broadcast. The sent Tweets were usually related to their programs and promotion for Kpop artists. These Tweets tended to be positive, and according to URLs, not only Kpop but also Korean dramas had considerable influence on the Korean wave in Mexico.

Company Name Discrimination in Tweets using Topic Signatures Extracted from News Corpus

  • Hong, Beomseok;Kim, Yanggon;Lee, Sang Ho
    • Journal of Computing Science and Engineering
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    • v.10 no.4
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    • pp.128-136
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    • 2016
  • It is impossible for any human being to analyze the more than 500 million tweets that are generated per day. Lexical ambiguities on Twitter make it difficult to retrieve the desired data and relevant topics. Most of the solutions for the word sense disambiguation problem rely on knowledge base systems. Unfortunately, it is expensive and time-consuming to manually create a knowledge base system, resulting in a knowledge acquisition bottleneck. To solve the knowledge-acquisition bottleneck, a topic signature is used to disambiguate words. In this paper, we evaluate the effectiveness of various features of newspapers on the topic signature extraction for word sense discrimination in tweets. Based on our results, topic signatures obtained from a snippet feature exhibit higher accuracy in discriminating company names than those from the article body. We conclude that topic signatures extracted from news articles improve the accuracy of word sense discrimination in the automated analysis of tweets.

Disaster Events Detection using Twitter Data

  • Yun, Hong-Won
    • Journal of information and communication convergence engineering
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.69-73
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    • 2011
  • Twitter is a microblogging service that allows its user to share short messages called tweets with each other. All the tweets are visible on a public timeline. These tweets have the valuable geospatial component and particularly time critical events. In this paper, our interest is in the rapid detection of disaster events such as tsunami, tornadoes, forest fires, and earthquakes. We describe the detection system of disaster events and show the way to detect a target event from Twitter data. This research examines the three disasters during the same time period and compares Twitter activity and Internet news on Google. A significant result from this research is that emergency detection could begin using microblogging service.

A Method for Twitter Spam Detection Using N-Gram Dictionary Under Limited Labeling (트레이닝 데이터가 제한된 환경에서 N-Gram 사전을 이용한 트위터 스팸 탐지 방법)

  • Choi, Hyeok-Jun;Park, Cheong Hee
    • KIPS Transactions on Software and Data Engineering
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    • v.6 no.9
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    • pp.445-456
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    • 2017
  • In this paper, we propose a method to detect spam tweets containing unhealthy information by using an n-gram dictionary under limited labeling. Spam tweets that contain unhealthy information have a tendency to use similar words and sentences. Based on this characteristic, we show that spam tweets can be effectively detected by applying a Naive Bayesian classifier using n-gram dictionaries which are constructed from spam tweets and normal tweets. On the other hand, constructing an initial training set requires very high cost because a large amount of data flows in real time in a twitter. Therefore, there is a need for a spam detection method that can be applied in an environment where the initial training set is very small or non exist. To solve the problem, we propose a method to generate pseudo-labels by utilizing twitter's retweet function and use them for the configuration of the initial training set and the n-gram dictionary update. The results from various experiments using 1.3 million korean tweets collected from December 1, 2016 to December 7, 2016 prove that the proposed method has superior performance than the compared spam detection methods.

Spatial Distribution Patterns of Twitter Data with Topic Modeling (토픽 모델링을 이용한 트위터 데이터의 공간 분포 패턴 분석)

  • Woo, Hyun Jee;Kim, Young Hoon
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.376-387
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    • 2017
  • This paper attempts to analyze the geographical characters of Twitter data and presents analysis potentials for social network analysis in geography. First, this paper suggests a methodology for a topic modeling-based approach in order to identify the geographical characteristics of tweets, including an analysis flow of Twitter data sets, tweet data collection and conversion, textural pre-processing and structural analysis, topic discovery, and interpretation of tweets' topics. GPS coordinates referencing tweets(geotweets) were extracted among sampled Twitter data sets because it contains the tweet place where it was created. This paper identifies a correlated relationship between some specific topics and local places in Jeju. This correlation is closely associated with some place names and local sites in Jeju Island. We assume it is the intention of tweeters to record their tweet places and to share and retweet with other tweeters in some cases. A surface density map shows the hotspots of tweets, detecting around some specific places and sites such as Jeju airport, sightseeing sites, and local places in Jeju Island. The hotspots show similar patterns of the floating population of Jeju, especially the thirty-year age group. In addition, a topic modeling algorithm is applied for the geographical topic discovery and comparison of the spatial patterns of tweets. Finally, this empirical analysis presents that Twitter data, as social network data, provide geographical significance, with topic modeling approach being useful in analyzing the textural features reflecting the geographical characteristics in large data sets of tweets.

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