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Predicting the Turkish Elections with Twitter Data

ataspinar.wordpress.com

8 points by ataspinar 11 years ago · 6 comments

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gus_massa 11 years ago

Looks like a interesting but difficult project. From the article:

> The question then is to what extent the content of Twitter is representative of voting behaviour and how accurately we can predict the results of an election with Twitter data.

Some demographics (young? city?) are overrepresented than others (old? farms?). In some cases, it's cool to vote publically for a party, so the people is more eager to say it publically or directly lie in the tweets. In other cases, people is afraid to say publically that they will vote for a party ...

I think you will need many magical constants that are not available until you have 3 or 4 previous elections to fit the data.

Can you make a prediction for each province / state?

Good look, and post the progress and predictions before the election, and a post-mortem analysis after.

  • ataspinarOP 11 years ago

    yes I believe that some parties will be overrepresented if you solely look at the volume of tweets. This is simply due to the fact that Twitter in Turkey is more popular under young and educated people(1). It should however not be difficult to take this into account in the linear regression algorithm, because the tuning parameters can be determined with data from the previous elections.

    I had made an prediction for each province after initially collecting all the tweets, but the results were not accurate. At the moment I have also determined the location of about 33% of the twitter accounts and I hope the result will be better if I exclude all Twitterers which are not from the same province as the one I am doing the calculation on.

    Thanks for the feedback :)

    (1) http://webrazzi.com/2014/07/17/genart-ve-nielsenin-turkiyede...

  • ataspinarOP 11 years ago

    I dont see why people would lie on twitter, instead of simply not tweeting...

ataspinarOP 11 years ago

For nearly a century it was only possible to find out what the general public thinks with traditional polling, which costs thousands or even millions of dollars/euros. Since the rise of Web 2.0 Social Media analytics has been increasingly popular. A lot has been said about the predictive power of Twitter so far. According to some people you should be able to predict flu epidemics, unemployment and even riots/revolutions. What about Elections?

I have tried to predict the outcome of Turkish General elections of 1 November 2015 using Twitter data and I believe I will be able to predict quiete accurately. Within a few percent.

alex_1290 11 years ago

yes this looks interesting. It seems quite difficult to capture all the relevant terms in order to extract the holy formula within the boundaries of the twitter stuff. but if you can predict the election within a confidence bound of up to 7.43% I would say you have done a tremendous job and lives can be saved.

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