(Press-News.org) What do all Twitter users want? Followers – and lots of them. But unless you're a celebrity, it can be difficult to build your Twitter audience (and even some celebs have trouble). Looking at a half-million tweets over 15 months, a first-of-its-kind study from Georgia Tech has revealed a set of reliable predictors for building a Twitter following.
The research was performed by Eric Gilbert, assistant professor in Georgia Tech's School of Interactive Computing. Gilbert found that Twitter users can grow their followers by such tactics as:
Don't talk about yourself: Informational content attracts followers at a rate 30 times higher than content focused on the tweeter. The study found users talked about themselves in 41 percent of their tweets on average.
Be happy: Twitter is mainly based on weak social ties (most followers do not know each other offline), which makes it more important to stay away from negative posts such as death, unemployment and poor health.
Cool it on the hashtags: While hashtags are definitely useful tools for expressing emotional commentary or tying tweets to larger events or issues, they can be abused. Researchers found that the higher a Twitter users' "hashtag ratio," the less likely they were to attract new followers.
"To our knowledge, this is the first longitudinal study of follow predictors on Twitter," Gilbert said. "For the first time, we were able to explore the relative effects of social behavior, message content and network structure and show which of these factors has more influence on the number of Twitter followers."
Working with Ph.D. student C.J. Hutto and Sarita Yardi, now an assistant professor in the University of Michigan's School of Information, Gilbert examined the tweets of more than 500 Twitter users. After identifying 2,800 terms that convey positive and negative emotions, the team scored each term based on a sliding scale of positivity. They were then able to determine whether Twitter users who used each term gained or lost followers.
The team discovered that certain identifiable strategies in message content and interaction with other Twitter users, as well as the structure of one's Twitter network, have a predictable effect on the number of followers. For example, Twitter "informers" (users who share informational content) consistently attract more followers than "meformers" (users who share information about themselves).
"Followers are Twitter's most basic currency, yet little is understood about how to grow such an audience," said Gilbert. "By examining multiple factors that affect tie formation and dissolution over time on Twitter, we've discovered information that could help technologists design and build tools that help users grow their audiences."
###
The team's findings are summarized in the paper, "A Longitudinal Study of Follow Predictors on Twitter," which will be presented this week at the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems in Paris, France. To view research by other Georgia Tech researchers at SIGCHI, visit http://chi.gatech.edu. END
How to get more followers on Twitter
Georgia Tech study examines best methods for gaining Twitter followers
2013-05-02
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Satellite instrument package to assess space weather ready for delivery by CU-Boulder
2013-05-02
A multimillion dollar University of Colorado Boulder instrument package to study space weather has passed its pre-installation testing and is ready to be incorporated onto a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellite for a 2015 launch.
Designed and built by CU's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, the instrument suite known as the Extreme Ultraviolet and X-ray Irradiance Sensors, or EXIS, is the first of four identical packages that will fly on four NOAA weather satellites slated for launch beginning in 2015. CU-Boulder's EXIS will measure energy ...
Researchers determine where best to place defibrillators
2013-05-02
TORONTO: Prompt use of an automated external defibrillator, or AED, can greatly increase the survival rates of people who suffer a cardiac arrest. And MIE Professor Tim Chan, working with Dr. Laurie Morrison at St. Michael's Hospital, has developed a formula to determine where best to place these costly but life-saving devices.
In a paper published in Circulation, Chan and Morrison note that publicly registered AEDs in Toronto are not in the best locations to help victims of cardiac arrest. In fact, less than one in four of all cardiac arrests had an AED close by (within ...
NIST demonstrates transfer of ultraprecise time signals over a wireless optical channel
2013-05-02
By bouncing eye-safe laser pulses off a mirror on a hillside, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have transferred ultraprecise time signals through open air with unprecedented precision equivalent to the "ticking" of the world's best next-generation atomic clocks.
Described in Nature Photonics,* the demonstration shows how next-generation atomic clocks at different locations could be linked wirelessly to improve geodesy (altitude mapping), distribution of time and frequency information, satellite navigation, radar arrays and other ...
Health defects found in fish exposed to Deepwater Horizon oil spill
2013-05-02
Three years after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, crude oil toxicity continues to sicken a sentinel Gulf Coast fish species, according to new findings from a research team that includes a University of California, Davis, scientist.
With researchers from Louisiana and South Carolina, the scientists found that Gulf killifish embryos exposed to sediments from oiled locations show developmental abnormalities, including heart defects, delayed hatching and reduced hatching success. The killifish is an environmental indicator species, or a "canary in the ...
Wide-eyed fear expressions may help us -- and others -- to locate threats
2013-05-02
Wide-eyed expressions that typically signal fear may enlarge our visual field and mutually enhance others' ability to locate threats, according to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
The research, conducted by psychology graduate student Daniel Lee of the University of Toronto with advisor Adam Anderson, suggests that wide-eyed expressions of fear are functional in ways that directly benefit both the person who makes the expression and the person who observes it.
The findings show that widened eyes ...
Use of laser light yields versatile manipulation of a quantum bit
2013-05-02
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– By using light, researchers at UC Santa Barbara have manipulated the quantum state of a single atomic-sized defect in diamond –– the nitrogen-vacancy center –– in a method that not only allows for more unified control than conventional processes, but is more versatile, and opens up the possibility of exploring new solid-state quantum systems. Their results are published in the latest edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of the Sciences.
"In contrast to conventional electronics, we developed an all-optical scheme for controlling ...
Fire in Cape Cod
2013-05-02
According to the Cape Cod Times of April 30, 2013: "The Massachusetts Army National Guard's Natural Resource Program is conducting a prescribed burn at the Upper Cape base. The burn will be held in partnership with federal, state and non-profit agencies. The objective of the burn is to reduce the risk of wildfire by eliminating the heavy buildup of dead wood and debris that can act as fuel. Prescribed burns also manage the habitat for endangered and rare species on the 22,000 acre base. Local fire departments receive training during the prescribed burns. The fire, on a ...
Shaking things up: NIST researchers propose new old way to purify carbon nanotubes
2013-05-02
An old, somewhat passé, trick used to purify protein samples based on their affinity for water has found new fans at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), where materials scientists are using it to divvy up solutions of carbon nanotubes, separating the metallic nanotubes from semiconductors. They say it's a fast, easy and cheap way to produce high-purity samples of carbon nanotubes for use in nanoscale electronics and many other applications.*
Carbon nanotubes are formed from rolled-up sheets of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal pattern resembling ...
New molecule heralds hope for muscular dystrophy treatment
2013-05-02
CHAMPAIGN, lll. — There's hope for patients with myotonic dystrophy. A new small molecule developed by researchers at the University of Illinois has been shown to break up the protein-RNA clusters that cause the disease in living human cells, an important first step toward developing a pharmaceutical treatment for the as-yet untreatable disease.
Steven C. Zimmerman, the Roger Adams Professor of Chemistry at the U. of I., led the group in developing and demonstrating the compound. The National Institutes of Health supported the work published in the journal ACS Chemical ...
NASA sees Cyclone Zane bearing down on Queensland, Australia
2013-05-02
NASA's Aqua satellite captured an image of Cyclone Zane headed toward the northern Cape York Peninsula of Queensland where it is expected to make landfall by May 2 and cross into the Gulf of Carpentaria.
A cyclone Warning is in effect for coastal areas from Mapoon to Cape York to Cape Flattery.
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Zane on May 1 at 04:05 UTC (12:05 a.m. EDT) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer instrument captured a visible image of the cyclone. Zane's most powerful thunderstorms continue to be around the low-level circulation center, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Sleeping in on weekends may help boost teens’ mental health
Study: Teens use cellphones for an hour a day at school
After more than two years of war, Palestinian children are hungry, denied education and “like the living dead”
The untold story of life with Prader-Willi syndrome - according to the siblings who live it
How the parasite that ‘gave up sex’ found more hosts – and why its victory won’t last
When is it time to jump? The boiling frog problem of AI use in physics education
Twitter data reveals partisan divide in understanding why pollen season's getting worse
AI is quick but risky for updating old software
Revolutionizing biosecurity: new multi-omics framework to transform invasive species management
From ancient herb to modern medicine: new review unveils the multi-targeted healing potential of Borago officinalis
Building a global scientific community: Biological Diversity Journal announces dual recruitment of Editorial Board and Youth Editorial Board members
Microbes that break down antibiotics help protect ecosystems under drug pollution
Smart biochar that remembers pollutants offers a new way to clean water and recycle biomass
Rice genes matter more than domestication in shaping plant microbiomes
Ticking time bomb: Some farmers report as many as 70 tick encounters over a 6-month period
Turning garden and crop waste into plastics
Scientists discover ‘platypus galaxies’ in the early universe
Seeing thyroid cancer in a new light: when AI meets label-free imaging in the operating room
Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio may aid risk stratification in depressive disorder
2026 Seismological Society of America Annual Meeting
AI-powered ECG analysis offers promising path for early detection of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, says Mount Sinai researchers
GIMM uncovers flaws in lab-grown heart cells and paves the way for improved treatments
Cracking the evolutionary code of sleep
Medications could help the aging brain cope with surgery, memory impairment
Back pain linked to worse sleep years later in men over 65, according to study
CDC urges ‘shared decision-making’ on some childhood vaccines; many unclear about what that means
New research finds that an ‘equal treatment’ approach to economic opportunity advertising can backfire
Researchers create shape-shifting, self-navigating microparticles
Science army mobilizes to map US soil microbiome
Researchers develop new tools to turn grain crops into biosensors
[Press-News.org] How to get more followers on TwitterGeorgia Tech study examines best methods for gaining Twitter followers