https://doi.org/10.1140/epjds/s13688-017-0126-4
Regular article
Measuring and monitoring collective attention during shocking events
1
Department of Electronic Science and Technology, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, 230000, China
2
School of Computing and Information, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, 15260, USA
* e-mail: yurulin@pitt.edu
Received:
30
May
2017
Accepted:
12
November
2017
Published online:
22
November
2017
There has been growing interest in leveraging Web-based social and communication technologies for better crisis response. How might the Web platforms be used as an observatory to systematically understand the dynamics of the public’s attention during disaster events? And how could we monitor such attention in a cost-effective way? In this work, we propose an ‘attention shift network’ framework to systematically observe, measure, and analyze the dynamics of collective attention in response to real-world exogenous shocks such as disasters. Through tracing hashtags that appeared in Twitter users’ complete timeline around several violent terrorist attacks, we study the properties of network structures and reveal the temporal dynamics of the collective attention across multiple disasters. Further, to enable an efficient monitoring of the collective attention dynamics, we propose an effective stochastic sampling approach that accounts for the users’ hashtag adoption frequency, connectedness and diversity, as well as data variability. We conduct extensive experiments to show that the proposed sampling approach significantly outperforms several alternative methods in both retaining the network structures and preserving the information with a small set of sampling targets, suggesting the utility of the proposed method in various realistic settings.
Key words: collective attention / disaster response / collective intelligence / attention sampling
© The Author(s), 2017