Geolocation Prediction from Tweets: A Case Study of Influenza-like Illness in Australia
Bingnan Li, Zi Chen, Samsung Lim
2020
Abstract
Twitter has become an effective platform for gathering massive event-related data from growing popularity. It provides an approach to monitoring and analysis of the emergence and devolvement of events. In the field of data mining and social media analysis, geographic information is an important element to be factored in. However, only nearly 2% of tweets contain accurate geographic information because of various concerns e.g. complexity and privacy. In order to overcome this restriction, devising methods of geolocation prediction has become the main topic in this filed. Geographic information plays a valuable role in responding to the control and surveillance of epidemic diseases. In this study, we constructed a geolocation prediction method based on potential location-related tweet metadata. Coordinate information can be calculated from the bounding box, while location information can be extracted from the text content, the user’s location at the time of use and the labelled place names using the Named Entity Recognition technique. Three types of coordinate sets of Australian suburbs are defined and used to construct coordinates references from the place names. Models with different parameters have been applied to predict geolocations of influenza-like illness from the tweets of the 2019 flu season in Australia. The results show that the proposed models with four parameters perform better than the existing models. When the area threshold is set to 4,500 km2, the best model can successfully predict influenza-like illness with the mean error distance of 4.65 km and the median error distance of 2.57 km. Hence the proposed method is shown to enhance the geographic information associated with the tweets and make the emergency response to influenza-like illness more effective and efficient.
DownloadPaper Citation
in Harvard Style
Li B., Chen Z. and Lim S. (2020). Geolocation Prediction from Tweets: A Case Study of Influenza-like Illness in Australia.In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Geographical Information Systems Theory, Applications and Management - Volume 1: GISTAM, ISBN 978-989-758-425-1, pages 160-167. DOI: 10.5220/0009345101600167
in Bibtex Style
@conference{gistam20,
author={Bingnan Li and Zi Chen and Samsung Lim},
title={Geolocation Prediction from Tweets: A Case Study of Influenza-like Illness in Australia},
booktitle={Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Geographical Information Systems Theory, Applications and Management - Volume 1: GISTAM,},
year={2020},
pages={160-167},
publisher={SciTePress},
organization={INSTICC},
doi={10.5220/0009345101600167},
isbn={978-989-758-425-1},
}
in EndNote Style
TY - CONF
JO - Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Geographical Information Systems Theory, Applications and Management - Volume 1: GISTAM,
TI - Geolocation Prediction from Tweets: A Case Study of Influenza-like Illness in Australia
SN - 978-989-758-425-1
AU - Li B.
AU - Chen Z.
AU - Lim S.
PY - 2020
SP - 160
EP - 167
DO - 10.5220/0009345101600167