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Conducting Twitter Research

ASIST Webinar 12/2013. Conducting Twitter Research. Kim Holmberg, PhD Statistical Cybermetrics Research Group University of Wolverhampton, UK (e) kim.holmberg@abo.fi (w3) http://kimholmberg.fi. Cascades, Islands, or Streams?

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Conducting Twitter Research

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  1. ASIST Webinar 12/2013 Conducting Twitter Research Kim Holmberg, PhD Statistical Cybermetrics Research GroupUniversity of Wolverhampton, UK (e) kim.holmberg@abo.fi (w3) http://kimholmberg.fi

  2. Cascades, Islands, or Streams? Time, Topic, and Scholarly Activities in Humanities and Social Science Research Indiana University, Bloomington, USA University of Wolverhampton, UK Université de Montréal, Canada

  3. Cascades, Islands, or Streams? Integrate several datasets representing a broad range of scholarly activities Use methodological and data triangulation to explore the lifecycle of topics within and across a range of scholarly activities Develop transparent tools and techniques to enable future predictive analyses

  4. I’m preparing slides for an #ASIST #webinar

  5. DATA COLLECTION Webometric Analyst, for data collection via Twitter’s API, data cleaning and analysis http://lexiurl.wlv.ac.uk/ For detailed instructions visit http://lexiurl.wlv.ac.uk/searcher/twitter.htm

  6. DATA COLLECTION Other data collection tools Twitter Archiving Google Spreadsheet (TAGS) http://mashe.hawksey.info/2013/02/twitter-archive-tagsv5/ HootSuite http://hootsuite.com/ Or you can write your own script: https://dev.twitter.com/ http://140dev.com/free-twitter-api-source-code-library/twitter-database-server/

  7. DATA COLLECTION Information dissemination Tweet Retweet or RT @username #Hashtag Tweeters Influence, popularity Networks, communities Content, trends Time series, sentiment

  8. DATA EXTRACTION Use Webometric Analyst to sort the data and depending on your research goals, to extract URLs, hashtags or usernames or to remove stopwords from the tweets

  9. ETHICS Data collected from social media sites is openly available on the web, hence it is already fully public and does not raise any ethical concerns (Wilkinson & Thelwall, 2011). However, in some cases the content of the tweets, blog entries or comments collected may contain identifiable, sensitive information. Although already public, publicizing such information by discussing it in an academic article could potentially have unwanted side-effects. Hence, one must consider to anonymise all data and treate it confidentially. Wilkinson, D. & Thelwall, M. (2011). Researching personal information on the public Web: Methods and ethics, Social Science Computer Review, vol. 29, no. 4, pp. 387-401.

  10. What can we research? Networks (users, words, topics, …) Content (tweets, RTs, hashtags, …) 1 2

  11. FIRST STEPS Step 1. What do you want to research? Step 2. Collect tweets that are relevant for your research questions Step 3. Sort and clean the tweets (e.g. tweets vs. retweets, remove tweets in other languages, remove spam, remove false positives, ...) Step 4. Extract the data that you need (e.g. tweeters, usernames mentioned, hashtags, URLs, ...) 1 2

  12. 1 NETWORK ANALYSIS Possible research questions: How different communities related to A are in connection to each other? Who is most central/influential (has most connections) in a certain network of tweeters? How information is disseminated in the network? Who the actors involved in a certain network are? What kind of local communities are there in a certain network and what do those communities represent? and many more...

  13. TWITTER NETWORK DATA 1 2 3

  14. CREATE THE NETWORK ALTERNATIVE 1 This creates a network file (.net) based on the connections between tweeters and those they mention (@username) in their tweets. Detailed instructions on how to create and analyze conversational networks on Twitter are available at: http://lexiurl.wlv.ac.uk/searcher/twitterConversationNetworks.html

  15. CREATE THE NETWORK ALTERNATIVE 2 Sort the data Then convert the data into a network file

  16. OBJECTS OF ANALYSIS • An actors (person, group, organisation, word, etc.) position in the network • Structure of the network (in relation to other networks) or subnetworks (clusters)

  17. AN ACTORS POSITION Degree centrality Used to locate actors with influence in the network or those that are in a position where they can spread information in the network. Can be divided into in- and outdegree. How many other actors can this actor reach directly? Other often used centrality measures: closeness, betweenness, Eigen-vector

  18. NETWORK STRUCTURE Communities in the network Tells something about the structure of the network and how the different actors are spread and connected to each other in the network

  19. NETWORK ANALYSIS - tools of the trade Gephi (for network visualizations) http://gephi.org/ Ucinet (for network analysis and visualization) https://sites.google.com/site/ucinetsoftware/ Pajek (for network analysis and visualization) http://pajek.imfm.si/doku.php

  20. Analyzing astrophysicists’ conversational connections on Twitter Holmberg, Haustein, Bowman & Peters (work in progress) Communities detected based on the conversational connections in astrophysicists’ tweets

  21. Analyzing astrophysicists’ conversational connections on Twitter Holmberg, Haustein, Bowman & Peters (work in progress) Percentage of people with different roles in the 7 communities

  22. Climate change on Twitter: topics, communities and conversations about the IPCC Pearce, Holmberg, Hellsten & Nerlich (under review). • Three groups coded based on their stance to climate change: • Convinced • Skeptic • Neutral

  23. 1 NETWORK ANALYSIS Summary Step 4. Extract the data that you need (e.g. Tweeters and the usernames they mentioned, following or followers lists, ...) Step 5. Convert your data into a network file Step 6. Visualize the network and analyse In addition you may want to run some social network analysis on the network (e.g. centrality) or code the actors according to suitable titles (e.g. work roles, opinion about something, etc.)

  24. 2 CONTENT ANALYSIS Possible research questions: How is topic A discussed on Twitter? How certain activities on Twitter correlate with offline activities? How popular is A compared with B, based on visibility on Twitter? What is the public opinion (of tweeters) about A? What are tweeters saying about A? and many more...

  25. 15,672

  26. Quantitative Qualitative

  27. CONTENT ANALYSIS - manual coding Positive-Neutral-Negative Scientific-Not scientific-Not clear Skeptic-Convinced-Neutral Personal-Work related Astrophysics-Biochemistry-Cheminformatics ... Pro something-Against something and many more depending on your research goals...

  28. Holmberg, K. & Thelwall, M. (2013). Disciplinary differences in Twitter scholarly communication. In the Proceedings of 14th International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics conference, 2013, Vienna, Austria. Available at: http://issi2013.org/proceedings.html. Scientific content of the tweets by communication type

  29. CONTENT ANALYSIS - tools of the trade VOSviewer (to extract noun-phrases from tweets) http://www.vosviewer.com/ BibExcel (for co-word analysis) http://www8.umu.se/inforsk/Bibexcel/ Notepad++ (to search and replace in your data) http://notepad-plus-plus.org/ Screaming Frog SEO Spider (to decode short urls) http://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/seo-spider/

  30. Noun-phrases from one of the communities Analyzing astrophysicists’ conversational connections on Twitter Holmberg, Haustein, Bowman & Peters (work in progress)

  31. TIME SERIES - tools of the trade Mozdeh(Persian for Good news) Visit http://mozdeh.wlv.ac.uk/index.html for free download and instructions

  32. TIME SERIES Pearce, Holmberg, Hellsten & Nerlich (under review). Climate change on Twitter: topics, communities and conversations about the IPCC.

  33. The Next Pope? 699,337 tweets collected between February 12, 2013 and March 11, 2013.

  34. Pope Francis - Jorge Mario Bergoglio Was mentioned in 9 tweets...

  35. ONLINE/OFFLINE CORRELATIONS Comparison of Twitter and publication activity and impact • publications and tweets per day: ρ=−0.339* • citation rate and tweets per day: ρ=−0.457** Haustein, Bowman, Holmberg, Larivière, & Peters, (under review). Astrophysicists on Twitter: An in-depth analysis of tweeting and scientific publication behavior.

  36. ONLINE/OFFLINE CORRELATIONS Overall similarity between abstracts and tweets is low • cosine=0.081 • 4.1% of 50,854 tweet NPs in abstracts • 16.0% of 12,970 abstract NPs in tweets Haustein, Bowman, Holmberg, Larivière, & Peters, (under review). Astrophysicists on Twitter: An in-depth analysis of tweeting and scientific publication behavior.

  37. 2 CONTENT ANALYSIS Summary Step 4. Extract the data that you need (e.g. hashtags, usernames, original tweets, ...) And then, depending on your research goals: Step 5A. Analyze frequencies (e.g. most used hashtags, etc.) Step 5B. Classify the tweets manually Step 5C. Extract the noun phrases and create a co-mention network of them with VOSviewer Step 5D. Analyze time series of certain word/hashtag occurrences Step 5E. Run sentiment analysis on the tweets

  38. During this hour over 20,820,000 tweets were sent

  39. Thank you for your attention Kim Holmberg Statistical Cybermetrics Research GroupUniversity of Wolverhampton, UKkim.holmberg@abo.fi http://kimholmberg.fi @kholmber Acknowledgements This presentation is based upon work supported by the international funding initiative Digging into Data. Specifically, funding comes from the National Science Foundation in the United States (Grant No. 1208804), JISC in the United Kingdom, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

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