Having access to these data helps us pinpoint nodes of political concern or enthusiasm among certain populations. We can take those data, and we can work with government and public policy groups.
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 11, 2017 /24-7PressRelease/ -- The recent debate about the Trump Administration's plans to wind down the Deferred Administration for Child Arrivals program (DACA) has coincided with a steep uptick in online discussion in Arizona. Behavioral psychologist Sean D. Young, Ph.D., has unveiled initial data gathered by his research group at the UC Institute for Prediction Technology (UCIPT), using a new Twitter data visualization tool.
The tool, called Cloudberry, is an interactive analytics and visualization demo for large amounts of spatial-temporal data. The application was developed by UCI computer science researchers and has been collecting tweets since November 17, 2015, at the rate of approximately 30 tweets per second.
Currently, results for keywords at the state and county levels can be viewed for the United States.
Please see a set of screen shots displaying the real-time data and Dr. Young's YouTube video.
Dr. Young and his team were able to track spikes in discussion about DACA among populations in distinct geographical zones, focused down to the county level, with highest intensity located in Phoenix, Ariz., based on trends in recurring, sentiment-based key words and phrases.
"The Cloudberry tool demonstrates an immense capability to capture and analyze public sentiment, both on national and narrowly focused scales," said Dr. Young. "Most significantly, having access to these data helps us pinpoint nodes of political concern or enthusiasm among certain populations. We can take those data, and we can work with government and public policy groups to help shape targeted messages and solutions."
"One in four people worldwide - over a billion people - are using social media sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, to create, share, and discuss content," said Dr. Young. "Social media users are continuously generating large volumes of public data containing information on their activities, plans and intentions, moods and opinions, and social interactions. UCIPT develops tools for analyzing this data to inform a wide range of important solutions for both the public and private sectors."
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About Dr. Sean D. Young, author of "Stick with It":
Dr. Sean Young, an authoritative new voice in the field of behavioral science, knows a great deal about our habits - how we make them and how we can break them. He is the Founder and Director of the UC Institute for Prediction Technology and the UCLA Center for Digital Behavior. Dr. Young and his associates study cutting-edge and best practices for changing and predicting behavior, with particular expertise in health and medicine. His book, Stick with It, is Dr. Young's fascinating look at the science of behavior, filled with crucial knowledge and practical advice to help everyone successfully alter their actions and improve their lives. Whether it's absent-minded mistakes at work, a weakness for junk food, a smartphone addiction, or a lack of exercise, everyone has some bad habit or behavior that they'd like to change. But wanting to change and actually doing it - and sticking with it - are two very different things.
About UCIPT:
The University of California Institute for Prediction Technology (UCIPT) is a multidisciplinary, multicampus collaborative, accelerating innovations that leverage social technologies to predict human behaviors and outcomes. Some examples of potential research applications include:
- Tracking risk behaviors to predict disease, crime, poverty, or other negative outcomes and inform intervention efforts
- Discerning predictors of political opinion, social and moral values, academic success, or community involvement
- Understanding how and why people use certain technologies, buy certain products, or follow certain trends
The ultimate vision is to become a highly interdisciplinary, multisector hub of researchers, data scientists, and community partners that utilize, evaluate, and refine our tools and techniques for a broad array of applications.
Cloudberry uses an underlying data management platform called Apache AsterixDB, a Big Data platform originally co-developed by researchers spanning UCI and UCR.
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Screen shots demonstrating the concentration of DACA-related tweets by geographical location.