Abstract
The advent of social media expands our ability to transmit information and connect with others instantly, which enables us to behave as “social sensors.” Here, we studied concurrent bursty behavior of Twitter users during major sporting events to determine their function as social sensors. We show that the degree of concurrent bursts in tweets (posts) and retweets (re-posts) works as a strong indicator of winning or losing a game. More specifically, our simple tweet analysis of Japanese professional baseball games in 2013 revealed that social sensors can immediately react to positive and negative events through bursts of tweets, but that positive events are more likely to induce a subsequent burst of retweets. We confirm that these findings also hold true for tweets related to Major League Baseball games in 2015. Furthermore, we demonstrate active interactions among social sensors by constructing retweet networks during a baseball game. The resulting networks commonly exhibited user clusters depending on the baseball team, with a scale-free connectedness that is indicative of a substantial difference in user popularity as an information source. While previous studies have mainly focused on bursts of tweets as a simple indicator of a real-world event, the temporal correlation between tweets and retweets implies unique aspects of social sensors, offering new insights into human behavior in a highly connected world.
Highlights
Social media is an increasingly popular communication tool by which people have massive social interactions in cyberspace [1]
We focused on Twitter as a network of social sensors to investigate, a novel collective phenomenon empowered by social media
We examined how social sensors reacted to positive events in the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) baseball games
Summary
Social media is an increasingly popular communication tool by which people have massive social interactions in cyberspace [1]. A well-known example is that social media helped Arab Spring activists spread and share information, playing a key role in the ensuing revolutionary social movements [2]. As in this case, social media can interface between cyberspace and the physical world by globally connecting people and information in nontrivial ways, thereby leading to novel collective phenomena. Many social media studies have been conducted using Twitter, a popular social media that allows users to read, post, and forward a short text message of 140 characters or less (called tweets) These studies have focused on the characteristics and effects of Twitter, such as the PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0144646. These studies have focused on the characteristics and effects of Twitter, such as the PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0144646 December 14, 2015
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