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      Mining Public Opinion about Economic Issues: Twitter and the U.S. Presidential Election

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          Abstract

          Opinion polls have been the bridge between public opinion and politicians in elections. However, developing surveys to disclose people's feedback with respect to economic issues is limited, expensive, and time-consuming. In recent years, social media such as Twitter has enabled people to share their opinions regarding elections. Social media has provided a platform for collecting a large amount of social media data. This paper proposes a computational public opinion mining approach to explore the discussion of economic issues in social media during an election. Current related studies use text mining methods independently for election analysis and election prediction; this research combines two text mining methods: sentiment analysis and topic modeling. The proposed approach has effectively been deployed on millions of tweets to analyze economic concerns of people during the 2012 US presidential election.

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          Lexicon-Based Methods for Sentiment Analysis

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            Social Media Analysis and Public Opinion: The 2010 UK General Election

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              Characterizing and modeling an electoral campaign in the context of Twitter: 2011 Spanish Presidential Election as a case study

              Transmitting messages in the most efficient way as possible has always been one of politicians main concerns during electoral processes. Due to the rapidly growing number of users, online social networks have become ideal platforms for politicians to interact with their potential voters. Exploiting the available potential of these tools to maximize their influence over voters is one of politicians actual challenges. To step in this direction, we have analyzed the user activity in the online social network Twitter, during the 2011 Spanish Presidential electoral process, and found that such activity is correlated with the election results. We introduce a new measure to study political support in Twitter, which we call the Relative Support. We have also characterized user behavior by analyzing the structural and dynamical patterns of the complex networks emergent from the mention and retweet networks. Our results suggest that the collective attention is driven by a very small fraction of users. Furthermore we have analyzed the interactions taking place among politicians, observing a lack of debate. Finally we develop a network growth model to reproduce the interactions taking place among politicians.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                05 February 2018
                Article
                10.4018/IJSDS.2018010102
                1802.01786
                ced6ae43-72f8-4299-84ad-25902572b00d

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                cs.SI cs.CL cs.IR stat.AP stat.ML

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