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Sarah Vieweg

Researcher at Qatar Computing Research Institute

Publications -  50
Citations -  7028

Sarah Vieweg is an academic researcher from Qatar Computing Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social media & Microblogging. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 48 publications receiving 6327 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah Vieweg include University of Colorado Boulder & Qatar Foundation.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Microblogging during two natural hazards events: what twitter may contribute to situational awareness

TL;DR: Analysis of microblog posts generated during two recent, concurrent emergency events in North America via Twitter, a popular microblogging service, aims to inform next steps for extracting useful, relevant information during emergencies using information extraction (IE) techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

Processing Social Media Messages in Mass Emergency: A Survey

TL;DR: This survey surveys the state of the art regarding computational methods to process social media messages and highlights both their contributions and shortcomings, and methodically examines a series of key subproblems ranging from the detection of events to the creation of actionable and useful summaries.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Chatter on the red: what hazards threat reveals about the social life of microblogged information

TL;DR: This paper considers a subset of the computer-mediated communication that took place during the flooding of the Red River Valley in the US and Canada in March and April 2009, focusing on the use of Twitter, a microblogging service, to identify mechanisms of information production, distribution, and organization.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

AIDR: artificial intelligence for disaster response

TL;DR: AIDR has been successfully tested to classify informative vs. non-informative tweets posted during the 2013 Pakistan Earthquake and achieved a classification quality (measured using AUC) of 80%.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

What to Expect When the Unexpected Happens: Social Media Communications Across Crises

TL;DR: This paper investigates several crises-including natural hazards and human-induced disasters-in a systematic manner and with a consistent methodology, leading to insights about the prevalence of different information types and sources across a variety of crisis situations.