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Title Microblogging without Borders: Differences and Similarities
Authors Ruth Garcia, Bárbara Poblete, Marcelo Mendoza, Alejandro Jaimes
Publication date 2011
Abstract The fast increase in the ease of access to computing, coupled with
the rapid growth of social media has provided the space and
motivated people all over the world to publicly share many kinds of
information, from general interest topics such as elections and
fashion to private topics such as the users' mood. The widespread
use of microblogging services such as Twitter, in particular, have
led to vast amounts of data generated by users in many different
countries. In spite of this, very little is known about the
differences and similarities in the way that people in different
countries use such microblogging services. In this paper, we
describe the analysis of a large-scale collection of Twitter data.
First, we collected more than 550 million tweets from over 76
million users during August 20-29, 2010. Then, we identified the 10
countries with the highest volume of tweets during that period, and
finally, selected the users from that period for those 10 countries,
and collected all of their tweets for an entire year. Our analysis
is based on over 5 billion tweets for 4.7 million anonymous users.
We highlighting differences and similarities among these 10
countries with respect to language use, sentiment, and content of
tweets.
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Pages 1-4
Conference name ACM Web Science Conference
Publisher ACM Press (New York, NY, USA)
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