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Taking Brazil's pulse: tracking growing urban economies from online attention

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TLDR
It is shown that a city's glocality, measured with social media data, effectively signals the city's economic well-being.
Abstract
Urban resources are allocated according to socio-economic indicators, and rapid urbanization in developing countries calls for updating those indicators in a timely fashion. The prohibitive costs of census data collection make that very difficult. To avoid allocating resources upon outdated indicators, one could partly update or complement them using digital data. It has been shown that it is possible to use social media in developed countries (mainly UK and USA) for such a purpose. Here we show that this is the case for Brazil too. We analyze a random sample of a microblogging service popular in that country and accurately predict the GDPs of 45 Brazilian cities. To make these predictions, we exploit the sociological concept of glocality, which says that economically successful cities tend to be involved in interactions that are both local and global at the same time. We indeed show that a city's glocality, measured with social media data, effectively signals the city's economic well-being.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The creative city: A toolkit for urban innovators

TL;DR: The Creative City as discussed by the authors is a classic and has been republished many times, aiming to make readers feel: "I can do that too" and to spread confidence that creative and innovative solutions to urban problems are feasible however bad they may seem at first sight.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Measuring Urban Social Diversity Using Interconnected Geo-Social Networks

TL;DR: This work uses a dataset of approximately 37K users and 42K venues in London to build a network of Foursquare places and the parallel Twitter social network of visitors through check-ins, and defines four metrics of the social diversity of places which relate to their social brokerage role, their entropy, the homogeneity and the amount of serendipitous encounters they are able to induce.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Participatory Sensor Networks as Sensing Layers

TL;DR: This work shows the usefulness and potential of having sensing layers in participatory sensor networks and shows how to derive and create new applications and services that are not promptly available from different sensing layers, opening up very interesting research opportunities.
Book ChapterDOI

ELM Meets Urban Computing: Ensemble Urban Data for Smart City Application

TL;DR: The predictive power of various machine-learning features with regard to the popularity of retail stores in a city by using datasets collected from open data sources in several big cities are studied using ELM based method to transfer knowledge to small cities.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Mining top-up transactions and online classified ads to predict urban neighborhoods socioeconomic status

TL;DR: This study proposes to exploit patterns observed in developing countries, specifically in Latin America, where mobile phone usage is pervasive even among the poorest and the dominant modality for purchasing mobile airtime is the prepaid scheme (top-ups).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Twitter mood predicts the stock market.

TL;DR: This work investigates whether measurements of collective mood states derived from large-scale Twitter feeds are correlated to the value of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) over time and indicates that the accuracy of DJIA predictions can be significantly improved by the inclusion of specific public mood dimensions but not others.
Proceedings Article

Measuring User Influence in Twitter: The Million Follower Fallacy

TL;DR: An in-depth comparison of three measures of influence, using a large amount of data collected from Twitter, is presented, suggesting that topological measures such as indegree alone reveals very little about the influence of a user.
Proceedings Article

Predicting Elections with Twitter: What 140 Characters Reveal about Political Sentiment

TL;DR: It is found that the mere number of messages mentioning a party reflects the election result, and joint mentions of two parties are in line with real world political ties and coalitions.
Proceedings Article

From Tweets to Polls: Linking Text Sentiment to Public Opinion Time Series

TL;DR: This work connects measures of public opinion measured from polls with sentiment measured from text, and finds several surveys on consumer confidence and political opinion over the 2008 to 2009 period correlate to sentiment word frequencies in contemporaneous Twitter messages.
BookDOI

The Creative City : A Toolkit for Urban Innovators

TL;DR: The Creative City: Its Origins and Futures as mentioned in this paper is a 2nd edition of The Drama of Urban Change, a book about the creation and evolution of the creative city, its origins and future.
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