Published April 5, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

A social media analytics platform visualising the spread of COVID-19 in Italy via exploitation of automatically geotagged tweets

Description

Social media play an important role in the daily life of people around the globe and users have emerged as an active part of news distribution as well as production. The threatening pandemic of COVID-19 has been the lead subject in online discussions and posts, resulting to large amounts of related social media data, which can be utilised to reinforce the crisis management in several ways. Towards this direction, we propose a novel framework to collect, analyse, and visualise Twitter posts, which has been tailored to speci cally monitor the virus spread in severely a ected Italy. We present and evaluate a deep learning localisation technique that geotags posts based on the locations mentioned in their text, a face detection algorithm to estimate the number of people appearing in posted images, and a community detection approach to identify communities of Twitter users. Moreover, we propose further analysis of the collected posts to predict their reliability and to detect trending topics and events. Finally, we demonstrate an online platform that comprises an interactive map to display and lter analysed posts, utilising the outcome of the localisation technique, and a visual analytics dashboard that visualises the results of the topic, community, and event detection methodologies.

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A social media analytics platform visualising the spread of COVID-19 in Italy via exploitation of automatically geotagged tweets.pdf

Additional details

Funding

7SHIELD – Safety and Security Standards of Space Systems, ground Segments and Satellite data assets, via prevention, detection, response and mitigation of physical and cyber threats 883284
European Commission
aqua3S – Enhancing Standardisation strategies to integrate innovative technologies for Safety and Security in existing water networks 832876
European Commission
PathoCERT – Pathogen Contamination Emergency Response Technologies 883484
European Commission