HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
Towards a Comprehensive Picture of the Australian Twittersphere
1. Towards a Comprehensive Picture
of the Australian Twittersphere
Assoc. Prof. Axel Bruns
ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation
Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
a.bruns@qut.edu.au – @snurb_dot_info
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
2. Why Twitter?
o Researching Twitter:
o Significant world-wide social network
o ~200 million users (but how many active?)
o Varied range of uses: from phatic communication to emergency
coordination
o Healthy third-party ecosystem (for now)
o Strong history of user innovation:
@replies, #hashtags
o Flat and open network structure:
non-reciprocal following, public profiles by default
o Good API for gathering data for research
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
3. New Media and Public Communication:
Mapping Australian User-Created Content
in Online Social Networks
o Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Project (2010-13) – $410,000
o QUT (Brisbane), Sociomantic Labs (Berlin)
o First comprehensive study of Australian social media use
o Computer-assisted cultural analysis: tracking, mapping, analysing blogs, Twitter, Flickr,
YouTube as ‘networked publics’
o Addressing the problem of scale (‘Big Data’) and disciplinary change in media, cultural and
communication studies – natively digital methods
o Studying society with the Internet (Richard Rogers)
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
4. #hashtag Publics
o #hashtags
o ‘#’ + keyword makes tweets easily discoverable and marks themes
o E.g. #ausvotes, #qldfloods, #londonriots, #royalwedding, #euro2012, …
o Publics
o Attend to matters of shared concern with some level of co-awareness
o Varied in intensity and temporality
o Emergent, constituted via discourse & affect
o #hashtag publics
o Not all hashtags constitute publics; Twitter doesn’t ‘contain’ publics
o What are the patterns in the dynamics of different hashtag-based publics?
o What might account for these differences?
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
7. But Why?
o Possible research questions:
o Ad hoc events and publics:
o How do online publics form and dissolve? How do they
interact, what structures do they form?
o Where do they draw information from? What do they share?
o Do they simply consist of the usual suspects? How insular
and disconnected are online publics?
o Hashtags in context:
o How do different hashtag events compare? Are there
common types of hashtags/publics?
o How ‘big’ are they? What topics attract attention on
Twitter?
o What community (?) structures emerge?
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
8. Hashtag Publics, Hashtag Metrics
o How big is the central core of users?
o Long tail distribution: most active users responsible for
the majority of content
o 90/9/1 rule: how much does the top 1% of users
contribute?
o #royalwedding: ~10% of all tweets
o #qldfloods: ~17% of all tweets
o #auspol: ~65% of all tweets
o What do they do: inform, share, chat?
o How many links do they share?
o How much retweeting do they do (edited/unedited)?
o How many @replies do they send / receive?
o … etc.
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
10. Towards a Typology of Twitter Uses
o How are hashtags used (during acute events)?
o Gatewatching:
o Finding and sharing information about breaking news (before
the mainstream media do?)
o Ad hoc publics: many URLs, many retweets (even unedited)
o Audiencing:
o Shared experience of major (foreseen) events
o Imagined community of fellow participants: few URLs, limited
retweeting
o What other uses are there?
o Continuing discussions (#auspol, #bundesliga, …)
o Memes (#ghettohurricanenames, …)
o Emotive hashtags (#fail, #win, #headdesk, …)
o What about keywords?
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
11. Beyond Hashtags
o Publics on Twitter:
o Micro: @reply and retweet conversations
o Meso: hashtag ‘communities’
o Macro: follower/followee networks
Multiple overlapping publics / networks
o What drives their formation and dissipation?
o How do they interact and interweave?
o How are they interleaved with the wider
media ecology?
o Twitter doesn’t contain publics: publics transcend Twitter
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
14. Understanding Australian Twitter Use
o What is the Australian Twitter userbase?
o Large-scale snowballing project
o Starting from selected hashtag communities
(e.g. #ausvotes, #qldfloods, #masterchef)
o Identifying participating users, testing for ‘Australianness’:
o Timezone setting, location information, profile information
o Retrieving follower/followee information for each account
(very slow)
o Progress update:
o ~950,000 Australian users identified so far, ~21m connections
~2 million Australian users in total?
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
15. The Australian Twittersphere?
Follower/followee network:
~150,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~550,000 known accounts by mid-2011)
colour = outdegree, size = indegree
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
16. The Australian Twittersphere?
Follower/followee network:
~120,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~950,000 known accounts by early 2012)
colour = outdegree, size = indegree
17. Real Estate
Jobs
Property
HR
Business
Parenting
Thematic Clusters
Design
Business
Property
Mums Craft
Arts
Web Social Media
Creative Tech Food
Perth PR Wine
Marketing / PR Advertising
IT
Beer
Tech
Creative
Social
Design
ICTs
NGOs Fashion
Utilities
Farming Social Policy Beauty
Services
Agriculture Net Culture
Adelaide
Opinion Books Theatre
Greens News Literature Film Arts
Publishing
ALP
Hardline Progressives
News @KRuddMP
Conservatives
@JuliaGillard Radio
Conservatives TV Music
Journalists Triple J
Talkback
Dance
Breakfast TV
Hip Hop
Cycling Celebrities
Union
Evangelicals Swimming
NRL V8s
Football Teens
Christians
Cricket Teaching Hillsong
AFL e-Learning
Schools Jonas Bros.
Beliebers
18. #Hashtag Participation
Follower/followee network:
~120,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~950,000 known accounts by early 2012)
size = indegree
19. #auspol
Follower/followee network:
~120,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~950,000 known accounts by early 2012)
colour = #auspol tweets, size = indegree
20. #ausvotes
Follower/followee network:
~120,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~950,000 known accounts by early 2012)
colour = #ausvotes tweets, size = indegree
21. #qldfloods
Follower/followee network:
~120,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~950,000 known accounts by early 2012)
colour = #qldfloods tweets, size = indegree
22. #masterchef
Follower/followee network:
~120,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~950,000 known accounts by early 2012)
colour = #masterchef tweets, size = indeg.
23. theaustralian.com.au URLs
Follower/followee network:
~120,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~950,000 known accounts by early 2012)
colour = tweets with URLs, size = indegree
24. abc.net.au URLs
Follower/followee network:
~120,000 Australian Twitter users
(of ~950,000 known accounts by early 2012)
colour = tweets with URLs, size = indegree
25. Understanding Twitter Publics
o #hashtags:
o Useful coordinating mechanism for core discussion
o Relatively easy to capture and analyse
o Fails to capture non-hashtagged tweets about the topic
o Good case studies, but very little comparative work to date
o National / global Twittersphere maps
o Crucial contextual baseline for #hashtag case studies
o Slow and laborious data gathering process, never complete
o Very long-term perspective, beyond most funded projects
o Indispensable for study of Twitter as a public space
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
26. ‘Big Data’ and the Digital Humanities
o Emerging needs in Twitter research:
o Unified, compatible methods and metrics for Twitter analysis
Tools and approaches shared at http://mappingonlinepublics.net/
o Powerful infrastructure for long-term, high-volume tracking of
Australian public communication on Twitter
Data access requires substantial funding stream
o Facilities for long-term data storage and preservation
Key roles for National Library, National Archives
o Integration with related datasets (e.g. MSM content)
Need to address data interoperability questions
o Twitter as a test case for digital humanities research
o Widespread, open, public platform for everyday communication
o Tool for observing society at scale through Internet research
http://mappingonlinepublics.net/