Abstract

We demonstrate how one can generate predictions for several thousand incidents of Latin American civil unrest, often many days in advance, by surfacing informative public posts available on Twitter and Tumblr.The data mining system presented here runs daily and requires no manual intervention. Identification of informative posts is accomplished by applying multiple textual and geographic filters to a high-volume data feed consisting of tens of millions of posts per day which have been flagged as public by their authors. Predictions are built by annotating the filtered posts, typically a few dozen per day, with demographic, spatial, and temporal information.Key to our textual filters is the fact that social media posts are necessarily short, making it possible to easily infer topic by simply searching for comentions of typically unrelated terms within the same post (e.g. a future date comentioned with an unrest keyword). Additional textual filters then proceed by applying a logistic regression classifier trained to recognize accounts belonging to organizations who are likely to announce civil unrest.Geographic filtering is accomplished despite sparsely available GPS information and without relying on sophisticated natural language processing. A geocoding technique which infers non-GPS-known user locations via the locations of their GPS-known friends provides us with location estimates for 91,984,163 Twitter users at a median error of 6.65km. We show that announcements of upcoming events tend to localize within a small geographic region, allowing us to forecast event locations which are not explicitly mentioned in text.We annotate our forecasts with demographic information by searching the collected posts for demographic specific keywords generated by hand as well as with the aid of DBpedia.Our system has been in production since December 2012 and, at the time of this writing, has produced 4,771 distinct forecasts for events across ten Latin American nations. Manual examination of 2,859 posts surfaced by our method revealed that only 108 were discussing topics unrelated to civil unrest. Examination of 2,596 forecasts generated between 2013-07-01 and 2013-11-30 found 1,192 (45.9%) matched exactly the date and within a 100 km radius of a civil unrest event reported in traditional news media.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13388-014-0004-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Widespread adoption of social media has made it possible for any individual to rapidly communicate with an audience of thousands [1]

  • We show in detail how it is possible to examine social media and report on a large number of civil unrest events prior their occurrence, while they are still in their planning stages

  • Social media has become a powerful tool for the organization of mass gatherings of all types

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Summary

Introduction

Widespread adoption of social media has made it possible for any individual to rapidly communicate with an audience of thousands [1]. We show in detail how it is possible to examine social media and report on a large number of civil unrest events prior their occurrence, while they are still in their planning stages. We restrict our analyses only to data that has been explicitly flagged as public by its creator. Information such as IP addresses (which can be used for geolocation) or connection speed (which may correlate with large protests [3]) is ignored in this study

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