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Articles

What are we ‘tweeting’ about obesity? Mapping tweets with topic modeling and Geographic Information System

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Pages 90-102 | Received 29 Aug 2012, Accepted 26 Jan 2013, Published online: 19 Apr 2013
 

Abstract

Public health related tweets are difficult to identify in large conversational datasets like Twitter.com. Even more challenging is the visualization and analyses of the spatial patterns encoded in tweets. This study has the following objectives: how can topic modeling be used to identify relevant public health topics such as obesity on Twitter.com? What are the common obesity related themes? What is the spatial pattern of the themes? What are the research challenges of using large conversational datasets from social networking sites? Obesity is chosen as a test theme to demonstrate the effectiveness of topic modeling using Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) and spatial analysis using Geographic Information System (GIS). The dataset is constructed from tweets (originating from the United States) extracted from Twitter.com on obesity-related queries. Examples of such queries are ‘food deserts’, ‘fast food’, and ‘childhood obesity’. The tweets are also georeferenced and time stamped. Three cohesive and meaningful themes such as ‘childhood obesity and schools’, ‘obesity prevention’, and ‘obesity and food habits’ are extracted from the LDA model. The GIS analysis of the extracted themes show distinct spatial pattern between rural and urban areas, northern and southern states, and between coasts and inland states. Further, relating the themes with ancillary datasets such as US census and locations of fast food restaurants based upon the location of the tweets in a GIS environment opened new avenues for spatial analyses and mapping. Therefore the techniques used in this study provide a possible toolset for computational social scientists in general, and health researchers in specific, to better understand health problems from large conversational datasets.

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Patrick Gallagher, a Master's student in the Department of Geography, University of Connecticut. He was responsible for geocoding the tweets. The authors also thank the editors and the anonymous reviewers for helpful comments and suggestions. Responsibility for the opinions expressed herein is solely that of the authors.

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