DocumentCode
180686
Title
Real-Time Monitoring of Flu Epidemics through Linguistic and Statistical Analysis of Twitter Messages
Author
Talvis, Karolos ; Chorianopoulos, Kostantinos ; Kermanidis, Katia Lida
Author_Institution
Dept. of Inf., Ionian Univ., Corfu, Greece
fYear
2014
fDate
6-7 Nov. 2014
Firstpage
83
Lastpage
87
Abstract
The recent rise in popularity of Twitter and its open API provides developers the opportunity to extract amounts of data which can be a thesaurus of information. This opportunity led to the development of an open source and open API system called Flu track (http://flutrack.org) that monitors influenza epidemics, based on geo-located self-reports on Twitter. In particular, we detect words such as sore throat, cough, fever etc. Moreover, we detect the aggravation of a patient´s clinical condition when a user posts a second flu related tweet that contains words indicating further symptoms such as: worse, deteriorating. Finally, we present flu-positives with real time anonymous visualizations using maps (mapping), which might be helpful for authorities and sensitive populations to plan upcoming events or activities. In order to further aid the surveillance of the spreading of the disease, a classification experiment has been conducted for automatically identifying Tweets that describe cases with acute and more critical symptoms from those referring to milder cases. We found that making use of mereley very small n-gram keyword lexica, the automatic identification of critical cases reaches an accuracy of 92%.
Keywords
application program interfaces; diseases; epidemics; natural language processing; open systems; patient monitoring; real-time systems; social networking (online); statistical analysis; thesauri; Flutrack; Twitter messages; data extraction; disease spreading; geo-located self-reports; influenza epidemics; information thesaurus; linguistic analysis; n-gram keyword lexica; open API system; patient clinical condition; real time anonymous visualizations; real-time flu epidemics monitoring; statistical analysis; Data mining; Data visualization; Diseases; Google; Influenza; Pragmatics; Twitter; Twitter; data mining; data visualization; influenza epidemics; linguistic analysis; social media;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Semantic and Social Media Adaptation and Personalization (SMAP), 2014 9th International Workshop on
Conference_Location
Corfu
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-6813-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SMAP.2014.38
Filename
6978958
Link To Document