Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Facebook, Twitter data do not reveal true human behaviour

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Nov, 2014 12:19 PM
    As researchers are mining Facebook and Twitter data to learn about online and offline human behaviour, a new study warns them to be wary of serious pitfalls that arise when working with huge social media data sets.
     
    Such erroneous results can have huge implications as thousands of research papers each year are now based on data gleaned from social media.
     
    "Publicly available data feeds used in social media research do not always provide an accurate representation of the platform's overall data - and researchers are generally in the dark about when and how social media providers filter their data streams," explained Derek Ruths, assistant professor at McGill University in Montreal, Canada.
     
    "A large number of spammers and bots, which masquerade as normal users on social media, get mistakenly incorporated into many measurements and predictions of human behaviour," Ruths said.
     
    The design of social media platforms can dictate how users behave and, therefore, what behaviour can be measured.
     
    "For instance, on Facebook the absence of a "dislike" button makes negative responses to content harder to detect than positive "likes," added study co-author Jurgen Pfeffer of Carnegie Mellon University's Institute for Software Research.
     
    Researchers often report results for groups of easy-to-classify users, topics and events - making new methods seem more accurate than they actually are.
     
    For instance, efforts to infer political orientation of Twitter users achieve barely 65 percent accuracy for typical users - even though studies (focusing on politically active users) have claimed 90 percent accuracy, the authors contended.
     
    "The common thread in all these issues is the need for researchers to be more acutely aware of what they are actually analysing when working with social media data," Ruths concluded.
     
    The article appeared in the journal Science.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card

    Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card
    For many people, the rules for posting personal news on Facebook, Pinterest and other social media are clear: Put a Good Face on Everything. But that rule doesn't always extend to holiday cards.

    Had A Rough Year? Think Twice Before Telling The Story In Your Holiday Card

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories
    While highly committed people remember their relationship history accurately, couples in trouble do not, says new research....

    Stagnant relationships kill pleasant memories

    Poor societies more likely to believe in gods

    Poor societies more likely to believe in gods
    Societies living in harsh environments are more likely to believe in gods, says a study, suggesting that societies with less access to food and water are more likely...

    Poor societies more likely to believe in gods

    Mothers' education key to kid's academic success

    Mothers' education key to kid's academic success
    Researchers have found that the academic success of your kids depends a lot on the education provided by mothers as children born to relatively older....

    Mothers' education key to kid's academic success

    Selfie obsession may cost you your job

    Selfie obsession may cost you your job
    According to a study, users who click too many 'selfies' not only reflect narcissistic traits but also demonstrate a lack of self-control to employers....

    Selfie obsession may cost you your job

    Sad tunes could lift your mood after a break-up

    Sad tunes could lift your mood after a break-up
    One can experience four different cognitive rewards of music-evoked sadness - reward of imagination, emotion regulation, empathy and no "real life" implications...

    Sad tunes could lift your mood after a break-up