Analyzing Social Media Data with R Workshop on January 24th

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Analyzing Social Media Data with R

Data Community DC and District Data Labs are hosting a full-day Analyzing Social Media Data with R workshop on Saturday January 24th. For more info and to sign up, go to http://bit.ly/1FJjFIz. Register before January 9th for an early bird discount!

Overview

This beginner-to-intermediate level course will introduce you to various topics in social media analysis. Attendees will begin by learning social-scientific groundwork for understanding measurement and inference, and then demonstrate, through concrete examples using R, how to explore, measure, visualize, and communicate various aspects of social media. The course will be taught using parts of the instructors’ book, Social Media Mining with R, but will include important additions such as topic modeling and social network analysis.

What You Will Learn

Conceptually, students will learn about the potentials and pitfalls surrounding the measurement of socially generated data.

Concretely, students will learn how to scrape, parse, and visualize textual and other classes of social data via both static and hands-on examples. The course will then move into the analysis of social data, including the areas of topic modeling, sentiment analysis, and social network analysis. Within Social Network Analysis, student will learn the basics of social networks, how to calculate individual and network statistics using R, how to visualize networks in R, and advanced uses of social network analysis. Students will come away with hands-on experience, and R code that can be built out to serve their future needs.

Course Outline

The workshop will cover the following topics:

  • Introduction to Social Science Data
  • Principles of measurement and inference for social media data
  • Mining Text Data: Twitter
  • Basic text mining
  • Topic modeling
  • Sentiment analysis (dictionary and supervised learning)
  • Sentiment analysis (unsupervised learning using IRT)
  • Introduction to Social Network Analysis
  • Individual and network measures
  • Network Visualization Techniques
  • Advanced uses for Network Analysis
  • Conclusions

After taking this course, students will be aware of the possibilities and limitations inherent in social media. They will be able to obtain social data at medium scales, various add-on packages.

Instructors

Nathan Danneman is Fellow and Data Scientist for L-3 Data Tactics, where he has worked on sentiment analysis, geospatial anomaly detection, and behavioral cyber analytics. He holds a PhD in political science, and has an extensive background in causal modeling and game theory. During his graduate work, Nathan taught introductory statistics courses, and served as an on-campus consultant for quantitative theses and dissertations. Nathan has created novel sentiment analysis applications, and is a co-author of Social Media Mining with R.

Richard Heimann is Fellow and Chief Data Scientist at L-3 NSS. He also is an EMC Certified Data Scientist with concentrations in spatial statistics, data mining, and pattern discovery. He is an Adjunct Faculty at the University of Maryland Baltimore County, where he teaches Spatial Analysis and Statistical Reasoning, and an Instructor at George Mason University, where he teaches Human Terrain Analysis. Mr. Heimann recently provided data science support to customers, including DARPA, Department of Homeland Security, US Army, Counter-IED Operational Integration Center, and the Pentagon. Richard is a co-author of Social Media Mining with R.

Amanda Traud is currently a Data Scientist for L-3 Data Tactics, where she has worked on network analysis, and creating R and JavaScript programs to visualize and analyze networks. She holds a PhD in Biomathematics, and has explored the uses of network science in everything from Facebook to prairie dogs to zombie outbreaks. During her graduate work, Amanda taught many undergraduate and graduate workshops on using R and other network analysis tools.

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