The human geography of Twitter: Quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in England and Wales.

Given the centrality of regions in social movements, politics and public administration, here we aim to quantitatively study regional identity, cross-region communication and sentiment. This paper presents a new methodology to study social interaction within and between social-geographic regions, an...

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Main Authors: Rudy Arthur, Hywel T P Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214466
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spelling doaj-94fa1d55a1694103951788063b6c2e8a2021-03-03T20:44:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01144e021446610.1371/journal.pone.0214466The human geography of Twitter: Quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in England and Wales.Rudy ArthurHywel T P WilliamsGiven the centrality of regions in social movements, politics and public administration, here we aim to quantitatively study regional identity, cross-region communication and sentiment. This paper presents a new methodology to study social interaction within and between social-geographic regions, and then applies the methodology to a case study of England and Wales. We use a social network, built from geo-located Twitter data, to identify contiguous geographical regions with a shared social identity and then investigate patterns of communication within and between them. In contrast to other approaches (e.g. using phone call data records or online friendship networks), use of Twitter data provides message contents as well as social connections. This allows us to investigate not only the volume of communication between locations, but also the sentiment and vocabulary used in the messages. For example, our case study shows: a significant dialect difference between England and Wales; that regions tend to be more positive about themselves than about others, with the South being more 'self-regarding' than the North; and that people talk politics much more between regions than within. This study demonstrates how social media can be used to quantify regional identity and inter-region communications and sentiment, exposing these previously hard-to-observe geographic concepts to analysis.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214466
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rudy Arthur
Hywel T P Williams
spellingShingle Rudy Arthur
Hywel T P Williams
The human geography of Twitter: Quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in England and Wales.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rudy Arthur
Hywel T P Williams
author_sort Rudy Arthur
title The human geography of Twitter: Quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in England and Wales.
title_short The human geography of Twitter: Quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in England and Wales.
title_full The human geography of Twitter: Quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in England and Wales.
title_fullStr The human geography of Twitter: Quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in England and Wales.
title_full_unstemmed The human geography of Twitter: Quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in England and Wales.
title_sort human geography of twitter: quantifying regional identity and inter-region communication in england and wales.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Given the centrality of regions in social movements, politics and public administration, here we aim to quantitatively study regional identity, cross-region communication and sentiment. This paper presents a new methodology to study social interaction within and between social-geographic regions, and then applies the methodology to a case study of England and Wales. We use a social network, built from geo-located Twitter data, to identify contiguous geographical regions with a shared social identity and then investigate patterns of communication within and between them. In contrast to other approaches (e.g. using phone call data records or online friendship networks), use of Twitter data provides message contents as well as social connections. This allows us to investigate not only the volume of communication between locations, but also the sentiment and vocabulary used in the messages. For example, our case study shows: a significant dialect difference between England and Wales; that regions tend to be more positive about themselves than about others, with the South being more 'self-regarding' than the North; and that people talk politics much more between regions than within. This study demonstrates how social media can be used to quantify regional identity and inter-region communications and sentiment, exposing these previously hard-to-observe geographic concepts to analysis.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214466
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