Abstract
Twitter is a popular medium for individuals to gather information and express opinions on topics of interest to them. By understanding who is interested in what topics, we can gauge the public mood, especially during periods of polarization such as elections. However, while the total volume of tweets may be huge, many people tweet rarely, and tweets are short and often noisy. Hence, directly inferring topics from tweets is both complicated and difficult to scale. Instead, the network structure of Twitter (who tweets at whom, who follows whom) can telegraph the interests of Twitter users. We propose the Producer-Consumer Model (PCM) to link latent topical interests of individuals to the directed structure of the network. A key component of PCM is the modeling of incentives of Twitter users. In particular, for a user to attract more followers and become popular, she must strive to be perceived as an expert on some topic. We use this to reduce the parameter space of PCM, greatly increasing its scalability. We apply PCM to track the evolution of Twitter topics during the Italian Elections of $2013$, and also to interpret those topics using hashtags. A secondary application of PCM to a citation network of machine learning papers is also shown. Extensive simulations and experiments with large real-world datasets demonstrate the accuracy and scalability of PCM.
Citation
Deepayan Chakrabarti. "Modeling node incentives in directed networks." Ann. Appl. Stat. 11 (4) 2298 - 2331, December 2017. https://doi.org/10.1214/17-AOAS1079
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