PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Using social media for behavioral studies is cheap, fast, but fraught with biases

Carnegie Mellon, McGill researchers say higher methodological standards are needed

2014-11-27
(Press-News.org) PITTSBURGH--The rise of social media has seemed like a bonanza for behavioral scientists, who have eagerly tapped the social nets to quickly and cheaply gather huge amounts of data about what people are thinking and doing. But computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon University and McGill University warn that those massive datasets may be misleading. In a perspective article published in the Nov. 28 issue of the journal Science, Carnegie Mellon's Juergen Pfeffer and McGill's Derek Ruths contend that scientists need to find ways of correcting for the biases inherent in the information gathered from Twitter and other social media, or to at least acknowledge the shortcomings of that data. And it's not an insignificant problem; Pfeffer, an assistant research professor in CMU's Institute for Software Research, and Ruths, an assistant professor of computer science at McGill, note that thousands of research papers each year are now based on data gleaned from social media, a source of data that barely existed even five years ago. "Not everything that can be labeled as 'Big Data' is automatically great," Pfeffer said. He noted that many researchers think -- or hope -- that if they gather a large enough dataset they can overcome any biases or distortion that might lurk there. "But the old adage of behavioral research still applies: Know Your Data," he maintained. vStill, social media is a source of data that is hard to resist. "People want to say something about what's happening in the world and social media is a quick way to tap into that," Pfeffer said. Following the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013, for instance, Pfeffer collected 25 million related tweets in just two weeks. "You get the behavior of millions of people -- for free." The type of questions that researchers can now tackle can be compelling. Want to know how people perceive e-cigarettes? How people communicate their anxieties about diabetes? Whether the Arab Spring protests could have been predicted? Social media is a ready source for information about those questions and more. But despite researchers' attempts to generalize their study results to a broad population, social media sites often have substantial population biases; generating the random samples that give surveys their power to accurately reflect attitudes and behavior is problematic. Instagram, for instance, has special appeal to adults between the ages of 18 and 29, African-Americans, Latinos, women and urban dwellers, while Pinterest is dominated by women between the ages of 25 and 34 with average household incomes of $100,000. Yet Ruths and Pfeffer said researchers seldom acknowledge, much less correct, these built-in sampling biases. Other questions about data sampling may never be resolved because social media sites use proprietary algorithms to create or filter their data streams and those algorithms are subject to change without warning. Most researchers are left in the dark, though others with special relationships to the sites may get a look at the site's inner workings. The rise of these "embedded researchers," Ruths and Pfeffer said, in turn is creating a divided social media research community. As anyone who has used social media can attest, not all "people" on these sites are even people. Some are professional writers or public relations representatives, who post on behalf of celebrities or corporations, others are simply phantom accounts. Some "followers" can be bought. The social media sites try to hunt down and eliminate such bogus accounts -- half of all Twitter accounts created in 2013 have already been deleted -- but a lone researcher may have difficulty detecting those accounts within a dataset. "Most people doing real social science are aware of these issues," said Pfeffer who noted that some solutions may come from applying existing techniques already developed in such fields as epidemiology, statistics and machine learning. In other cases, scientists will need to develop new techniques for managing analytic bias. The Institute for Software Research is part of Carnegie Mellon's School of Computer Science, now celebrating its 25th year.

INFORMATION:

About Carnegie Mellon University: Carnegie Mellon is a private, internationally ranked research university with programs in areas ranging from science, technology and business, to public policy, the humanities and the arts. More than 12,000 students in the university's seven schools and colleges benefit from a small student-to-faculty ratio and an education characterized by its focus on creating and implementing solutions for real problems, interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation. A global university, Carnegie Mellon has campuses in Pittsburgh, Pa., California's Silicon Valley and Qatar, and programs in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe and Mexico.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A numbers game: Math helps to predict how the body fights disease

A numbers game: Math helps to predict how the body fights disease
2014-11-27
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute researchers have defined for the first time how the size of the immune response is controlled, using mathematical models to predict how powerfully immune cells respond to infection and disease. The finding, published today in the journal Science, has implications for our understanding of how harmful or beneficial immune responses can be manipulated for better health. The research team used mathematics and computer modeling to understand how complex signaling impacts the size of the response by key infection-fighting immune cells called ...

Education is key to climate adaptation

2014-11-27
Given that some climate change is already unavoidable--as just confirmed by the new IPCC report--investing in empowerment through universal education should be an essential element in climate change adaptation efforts, which so far focus mostly in engineering projects, according to a new study from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) published in the journal Science. The article draws upon extensive analysis of natural disaster data for 167 countries over the past four decades as well as a number of studies carried out in individual countries ...

Notre Dame biologist leads sequencing of the genomes of malaria-carrying mosquitoes

2014-11-27
Nora Besansky, O'Hara Professor of Biological Sciences at the University of Notre Dame and a member of the University's Eck Institute for Global Health, has led an international team of scientists in sequencing the genomes of 16 Anopheles mosquito species from around the world. Anopheles mosquitoes are responsible for transmitting human malaria parasites that cause an estimated 200 million cases and more than 600 thousand deaths each year. However, of the almost 500 different Anopheles species, only a few dozen can carry the parasite and only a handful of species are responsible ...

Mosquitoes and malaria: Scientists pinpoint how biting cousins have grown apart

2014-11-27
Certain species of mosquitoes are genetically better at transmitting malaria than even some of their close cousins, according to a multi-institutional team of researchers including Virginia Tech scientists. Of about 450 different species of mosquitoes in the Anopheles genus, only about 60 can transmit the Plasmodium malaria parasite that is harmful to people. The team chose 16 mosquito species that are currently found in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America, but evolved from the same ancestor approximately 100 million years ago. Today, the 16 species have varying ...

Social media data contain pitfalls for understanding human behavior

2014-11-27
A growing number of academic researchers are mining social media data to learn about both online and offline human behavior. In recent years, studies have claimed the ability to predict everything from summer blockbusters to fluctuations in the stock market. But mounting evidence of flaws in many of these studies points to a need for researchers to be wary of serious pitfalls that arise when working with huge social media data sets, according to computer scientists at McGill University in Montreal and Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Such erroneous results ...

Most American presidents destined to fade from nation's memory, study suggests

Most American presidents destined to fade from nations memory, study suggests
2014-11-27
American presidents spend their time in office trying to carve out a prominent place in the nation's collective memory, but most are destined to be forgotten within 50-to-100 years of their serving as president, suggests a study on presidential name recall released today by the journal Science. "By the year 2060, Americans will probably remember as much about the 39th and 40th presidents, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, as they now remember about our 13th president, Millard Fillmore," predicts study co-author Henry L. Roediger III, PhD, a human memory expert at Washington ...

Bitter food but good medicine from cucumber genetics

2014-11-27
High-tech genomics and traditional Chinese medicine come together as researchers identify the genes responsible for the intense bitter taste of wild cucumbers. Taming this bitterness made cucumber, pumpkin and their relatives into popular foods, but the same compounds also have potential to treat cancer and diabetes. "You don't eat wild cucumber, unless you want to use it as a purgative," said William Lucas, professor of plant biology at the University of California, Davis and coauthor on the paper to be published Nov. 28 in the journal Science. That bitter flavor in ...

Another human footprint in the ocean

Another human footprint in the ocean
2014-11-27
Human-induced changes to Earth's carbon cycle - for example, rising atmospheric carbon dioxide and ocean acidification - have been observed for decades. However, a study published this week in Science showed human activities, in particular industrial and agricultural processes, have also had significant impacts on the upper ocean nitrogen cycle. The rate of deposition of reactive nitrogen (i.e., nitrogen oxides from fossil fuel burning and ammonia compounds from fertilizer use) from the atmosphere to the open ocean has more than doubled globally over the last 100 years. ...

Single-atom gold catalysts may offer path to low-cost production of fuel and chemicals

2014-11-27
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, Mass.(November 27, 2014, 2 PM) -- New catalysts designed and investigated by Tufts University School of Engineering researchers and collaborators from other university and national laboratories have the potential to greatly reduce processing costs in future fuels, such as hydrogen. The catalysts are composed of a unique structure of single gold atoms bound by oxygen to several sodium or potassium atoms and supported on non-reactive silica materials. They demonstrate comparable activity and stability with catalysts comprising precious metal nanoparticles ...

Fragile X study offers hope of new autism treatment

2014-11-27
People affected by a common inherited form of autism could be helped by a drug that is being tested as a treatment for cancer. Researchers who have identified a chemical pathway that goes awry in the brains of Fragile X patients say the drug could reverse their behavioural symptoms. The scientists have found that a known naturally occurring chemical called cercosporamide can block the pathway and improve sociability in mice with the condition. The team at the University of Edinburgh and McGill University in Canada identified a key molecule - eIF4E - that drives excess ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Smoking cannabis in the home increases odds of detectable levels in children

Ohio State astronomy professor awarded Henry Draper Medal

Communities of color face greater barriers in accessing opioid medications for pain management

Researchers track sharp increase in diagnoses for sedative, hypnotic and anxiety use disorder in young adults

Advancement in DNA quantum computing using electric field gradients and nuclear spins

How pomalidomide boosts the immune system to fight multiple myeloma

PREPSOIL webinar explores soil literacy among youth: Why it matters and how educators can foster it

Imagining the physics of George R.R. Martin’s fictional universe

New twist in mystery of dinosaurs' origin

Baseline fasting glucose level, age, sex, and BMI and the development of diabetes in US adults

Food insecurity in pregnancy, receipt of food assistance, and perinatal complications

Exposure to secondhand cannabis smoke among children

New study reveals how a ‘non-industrialized’ style diet can reduce risk of chronic disease

Plant’s name-giving feature found to be new offspring-ensuring method

Predicting how childhood kidney cancers develop

New optical memory unit poised to improve processing speed and efficiency

World Leprosy Day: Tailored guidelines and reduced stigma needed to tackle leprosy, Irish case study reveals

FAU secures $21M Promise Neighborhoods grant for Broward UP underserved communities

Korea-US leading research institutes accelerate collaboration for energy technology innovation

JAMA names ten academic physicians and nurses to 2025 Editorial Fellowship Program

New study highlights role of lean red meat in gut and heart health as part of a balanced healthy diet

Microporous crystals for greater food safety – ERC proof of concept grant for researcher at Graz University of Technology

Offline versus online promotional media: Which drives better consumer engagement and behavioral responses?

Seoultech researchers use machine learning to ensure safe structural design

Empowering numerical weather predictions with drones as meteorological tools

From root to shoot: How silicon powers plant resilience

Curiosity- driven experiment helps unravel antibiotic-resistance mystery

Designing proteins with their environment in mind

Hepatitis B is a problem for a growing number of patients on immunosuppressive medications

Adults diagnosed with ADHD may have reduced life expectancies

[Press-News.org] Using social media for behavioral studies is cheap, fast, but fraught with biases
Carnegie Mellon, McGill researchers say higher methodological standards are needed