Community Topic Usage in Social Networks
Author(s) -
I. G. Wood
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
arrow@dit (dublin institute of technology)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/2809936.2809937
Subject(s) - topic model , computer science , latent dirichlet allocation , curse of dimensionality , scalability , hash function , dirichlet distribution , social media , conjugate prior , collaborative filtering , recommender system , bayesian probability , data mining , information retrieval , data science , machine learning , artificial intelligence , world wide web , prior probability , mathematics , mathematical analysis , computer security , database , boundary value problem
When studying large social media data sets, it is useful to reduce the dimensionality of both the network (e.g. by finding communities) and user-generated data such as text (e.g. using topic models). Algorithms exist for both these tasks, however their combination has received little attention and proposed models to date are not scalable (e.g.: [4]). One approach to such combined modelling is to perform community and topic modelling independently and later combine the results. In the case of overlapping communities, this combination requires a method for attributing each users topic usage to the communities in which she participates. This paper presents a Bayesian model for attributing individual documents to communities which balances the users proportional community membership with community topic coherence. Community topic usage is modelled with a Dirichlet distribution with fixed concentration parameter, leading to a well defined conjugate prior. Thought the prior is computationally expensive, the already reduced dimensionality in both topics and communities make a tractable algorithm feasible, even for large data sets. The model is applied to a corpus of tweets and twitter follower relations collected on hash tags used by people with eating disorders [14].
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