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Learning Social Media Analytics with R

You're reading from   Learning Social Media Analytics with R Transform data from social media platforms into actionable business insights

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787127524
Length 394 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Raghav Bali Raghav Bali
Author Profile Icon Raghav Bali
Raghav Bali
Dipanjan Sarkar Dipanjan Sarkar
Author Profile Icon Dipanjan Sarkar
Dipanjan Sarkar
Karthik Ganapathy Karthik Ganapathy
Author Profile Icon Karthik Ganapathy
Karthik Ganapathy
Tushar Sharma Tushar Sharma
Author Profile Icon Tushar Sharma
Tushar Sharma
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with R and Social Media Analytics 2. Twitter – What's Happening with 140 Characters FREE CHAPTER 3. Analyzing Social Networks and Brand Engagements with Facebook 4. Foursquare – Are You Checked in Yet? 5. Analyzing Software Collaboration Trends I – Social Coding with GitHub 6. Analyzing Software Collaboration Trends II - Answering Your Questions with StackExchange 7. Believe What You See – Flickr Data Analysis 8. News – The Collective Social Media! Index

Follower graph analysis

So far, we have analyzed Twitter and tweets to uncover some interesting insights using techniques and concepts of trend analysis and sentiment analysis. We've utilized different attributes of tweets, like creation time, location and even the text itself, to answer certain questions. In this section, we will touch upon Twitter's network aspects. #BraceYourSelves

A social network is a network or a graph at its core. In formal words, a social network is generally a graph representing its users as nodes (or vertices) linked to each other based on certain relationships called edges. Each social network has its own definition of these relationships. For this section, we will focus on Twitter's relationships and network in general.

In Twitter-verse as we all know, there are no friends! A friend relationship is usually a bidirectional relationship, that is, if A is a friend of B, then it is safe to say that B is also a friend of A (well, usually; see Facebook...

You have been reading a chapter from
Learning Social Media Analytics with R
Published in: May 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781787127524
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