Understanding Violence Through Social Media: Assessing Feasibility of Twitter Utilization in Conflict Prediction Using Messages Within Iraq, Extreme Negative Terminology Predicts Subsequent Violence Understanding Violence Through Social Media: Assessing Feasibility of Twitter Utilization in Conflict Prediction Using Messages Within Iraq, Extreme Negative Terminology Predicts Subsequent Violence

Understanding Violence Through Social Media: Assessing Feasibility of Twitter Utilization in Conflict Prediction Using Messages Within Iraq, Extreme Negative Terminology Predicts Subsequent Violence

    • 9,99 €
    • 9,99 €

Publisher Description

This important December 2017 report has been professionally converted for accurate flowing-text e-book format reproduction.

While social media analysis has been widely utilized to predict various market and political trends, its utilization to improve geospatial conflict prediction in contested environments remains understudied. To determine the feasibility of social media utilization in conflict prediction, we compared historical conflict data and social media metadata, utilizing over 829,537 geo-referenced messages sent through the Twitter network within Iraq from August 2013 to July 2014. From our research, we conclude that social media metadata has a positive impact on conflict prediction when compared with historical conflict data. Additionally, we find that utilizing the most extreme negative terminology from a locally derived social media lexicon provided the most significant predictive accuracy for determining areas that would experience subsequent violence. We suggest future research projects center on improving the conflict prediction capability of social media data and include social media analysis in operational assessments.

I. INTRODUCTION * II. LITERATURE REVIEW * A. SOCIAL MEDIA ANALYSIS AND MILITARY DOCTRINE * B. CONFLICT PREDICTION * C. METHODOLOGY SYNTHESIS * III. BACKGROUND—IRAQ * IV. RESEARCH METHODS * A. HYPOTHESIS * B. DATA AND METHODS * 1. Social Media * 2. Sentiment Dictionary * 3. Analysis Framework * 4. Dependent Variable * 5. Independent Variable * 6. Control Variables * C. REGRESSION ANALYSIS * V. RESULTS * A. FINDING ONE—TWITTER MATTERS * B. FINDING TWO—NEGATIVE SENTIMENT IMPROVES PREDICTIONS * C. FINDING THREE—EXTREME SENTIMENT MATTERS MORE * VI. ADDITIONAL RESEARCH * A. SENTIMENT FOLLOWING VIOLENT EVENTS * B. DOES THE NATURE OF THE CONFLICT MATTER? * C. ARABIC LEXICONS AND TWITTER * VII. CONCLUSION

Social media continues to evolve as a means of sentiment sharing, communication, and social interaction. The interconnectedness of population groups continues to grow with the advancement of mobile device technology and the accessibility of Internet communication infrastructures. This medium provides a constant flow of social tendencies throughout 37 percent of the world's population, which are not limited to benign subjects but also include radical leanings and other forms of social unrest. Analyzing social media trends in key locations of strategic concern could provide an additional tool for conflict prediction.3 Additionally, examining the relationship between social media sentiments and violent events could allow decision makers to be proactive and less reactionary.

Why is this important? Human domain dynamics constantly shift, so the requirement to seek new and inventive ways to gather intelligence on those shifts is imperative. Moreover, the environments where human intelligence is needed most are often the hardest to access physically. The lack of real-time human intelligence in locations with limited access is therefore a serious problem. However, advances in communication technology have also produced new means for maintaining situational awareness. This research seeks to provide insight into human sentiment through social media analysis as a viable solution to this problem. Once we understand the relationship between sentiment and violence in a particular conflict, we can operationalize solutions to curb the occurrence of violence through conflict resolution.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2018
6 July
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
107
Pages
PUBLISHER
Progressive Management
SIZE
269.6
KB

More Books by Progressive Management

Apollo and America's Moon Landing Program: Apollo 11 Official NASA Mission Reports and Press Kit Apollo and America's Moon Landing Program: Apollo 11 Official NASA Mission Reports and Press Kit
2011
2011 Complete Guide to Saudi Arabia: Oil and Energy, King Abdullah, Military, Human and Religious Rights, Islam, Mecca and Medina, History, Trade, Economy - Authoritative Coverage 2011 Complete Guide to Saudi Arabia: Oil and Energy, King Abdullah, Military, Human and Religious Rights, Islam, Mecca and Medina, History, Trade, Economy - Authoritative Coverage
2011
2011 Complete Guide to Libya: Muammar al Qadhafi (Colonel Gadhafi, Qaddafi, Gaddafi), Government, Politics, Military, Human Rights, History, Economy, Uprising - Authoritative Coverage 2011 Complete Guide to Libya: Muammar al Qadhafi (Colonel Gadhafi, Qaddafi, Gaddafi), Government, Politics, Military, Human Rights, History, Economy, Uprising - Authoritative Coverage
2011
The Bear's Den: Russian Anti-Access/Area-Denial in the Maritime Domain - History of Soviet A2/AD Strategy and Similarities to Modern Russian Plans With Bubbles in Baltic, Black Sea, Syria, and Arctic The Bear's Den: Russian Anti-Access/Area-Denial in the Maritime Domain - History of Soviet A2/AD Strategy and Similarities to Modern Russian Plans With Bubbles in Baltic, Black Sea, Syria, and Arctic
2019
By Land, Sea, or Air? A Comparative Analysis of Cartel Smuggling Strategies: Drugs and Cocaine, Subs, Panga Go-Fast Boats and Container Vessels, Cars, Big Rigs, and Tunnels, Human Mule Packers By Land, Sea, or Air? A Comparative Analysis of Cartel Smuggling Strategies: Drugs and Cocaine, Subs, Panga Go-Fast Boats and Container Vessels, Cars, Big Rigs, and Tunnels, Human Mule Packers
2018
Images of Inherited War: Three American Presidents in Vietnam - Unique History, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Camelot, Containment, Cam Ranh Bay, Posse of Lies, Space Program, New Myth for an Old War Images of Inherited War: Three American Presidents in Vietnam - Unique History, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Camelot, Containment, Cam Ranh Bay, Posse of Lies, Space Program, New Myth for an Old War
2016