In just under seven years, Twitter has grown to count nearly three
percent of the entire global population among its active users who
have sent more than 170 billion 140–character messages. Today the
service plays such a significant role in American culture that the
Library of Congress has assembled a permanent archive of the site
back to its first tweet, updated daily. With its open API, Twitter
has become one of the most popular data sources for social
research, yet the majority of the literature has focused on it as
a text or network graph source, with only limited efforts to date
focusing exclusively on the geography of Twitter, assessing the
various sources of geographic information on the service and their
accuracy. More than three percent of all tweets are found to have
native location information available, while a naive geocoder
based on a simple major cities gazetteer and relying on the
user–provided Location and Profile fields is able to geolocate
more than a third of all tweets with high accuracy when measured
against the GPS–based baseline. Geographic proximity is found to
play a minimal role both in who users communicate with and what
they communicate about, providing evidence that social media is
shifting the communicative landscape.
Contents
Introduction
The
native geography of Twitter: Georeferenced tweets
The
linguistic geography of Twitter
From
text to maps: The textual geography of Twitter
Accuracy
and language
The
geography of communication on Twitter
The
geography of linking disccourse
User
profile links
Twitter
versus mainstream news media
Twitter’s
geography of growth and impact
Conclusions