Jun 13, 2014 · In this paper we took the case of the terrorist event in Woolwich, London in 2013 and built models to predict information flow size and survival.
Little is currently known about the factors that promote the propagation of information in online social networks following terrorist events.
Novel findings are reported that identify that the sentiment expressed in the tweet is statistically significantly predictive of both size and survival of ...
In this paper we took the case of the terrorist event in Woolwich, London in 2013 and built models to predict information flow size and survival using data ...
Burnap, Pete, Williams, Matthew L., Sloan, Luke, Rana, Omer, Housley, William, Edwards, Adam, Knight, Vincent, Procter, Rob and Voss, Alex (2014) Tweeting the ...
Fingerprint. Dive into the research topics of 'Tweeting the terror: modelling the social media reaction to the Woolwich terrorist attack'.
Williams, Matthew L. dc.contributor.author, Sloan, Luke. dc.contributor.author, Rana, Omer. dc.contributor.author, Housley, ...
I am a professor of Mathematics at Cardiff University. My interests are in teaching, research software, Game Theory and applied stochastic modelling.
To challenge some existing practice in. Twitter-based research, this article brings to the fore: (1) views of Twitter users through analysis of online survey ...
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This paper studies sentiments and survival of tweets post-terror attack by extracting tweets from Twitter, using factors like last retweet, number of ...