Computing political preference among twitter followers
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Don't turn social media into another 'Literary Digest' poll
Communications of the ACM
Predicting the 2011 dutch senate election results with Twitter
Proceedings of the Workshop on Semantic Analysis in Social Media
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Existing studies on predicting election results are under the assumption that all the users should be treated equally. However, recent work [14] shows that social media users from different groups (e.g., "silent majority" vs. "vocal minority") have significant differences in the generated content and tweeting behavior. The effect of these differences on predicting election results has not been exploited yet. In this paper, we study the spectrum of Twitter users who participate in the on-line discussion of 2012 U.S. Republican Presidential Primaries, and examine the predictive power of different user groups (e.g., highly engaged users vs. lowly engaged users, right-leaning users vs. left-leaning users) against Super Tuesday primaries in 10 states. The insights gained in this study can shed light on improving the social media based prediction from the user sampling perspective and more.