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Main Authors: Pramanik, Prithviraj, Mondal, Tamal, Nandi, Subrata, Saha, Mousumi
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.19421
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author Pramanik, Prithviraj
Mondal, Tamal
Nandi, Subrata
Saha, Mousumi
author_facet Pramanik, Prithviraj
Mondal, Tamal
Nandi, Subrata
Saha, Mousumi
contents In this digital age, Online Social Media's ubiquity has led it to it's role as a "Sensor". Starting from disaster response to political predictions, online social media like Twitter, have been instrumental and are actively researched areas. In this work, we have focused on something quite insidious in the current context, i.e., air pollution in developing regions. Starting as an empirical study on using Twitter as a "Sensor" to measure air quality, the focal point of this work is to identify the users who have been actively tweeting in the air pollution events in Delhi, the capital of India. From these users, we try to identify the influential ones, who play a significant role in creating the initial awareness and hence act as "Sensors". We have utilized a tailored "TRank" algorithm for finding out the influential users by considering \textit{Retweet, Favorite, and Follower influence} of the users. After ranking the users based on their social influence, we further study the behavior, i.e., perception of pollution from those users' posts with respect to the actual air pollution levels using the physical sensors. The tracking of influential users in air quality monitoring assists in developing a crowd sensed air quality measurement framework, which can augment the physical air quality sensors for raising awareness against air pollution.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_19421
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle AirCalypse: Can Twitter Help in Urban Air Quality Measurement and Who are the Influential Users?
Pramanik, Prithviraj
Mondal, Tamal
Nandi, Subrata
Saha, Mousumi
Physics and Society
Computers and Society
Social and Information Networks
In this digital age, Online Social Media's ubiquity has led it to it's role as a "Sensor". Starting from disaster response to political predictions, online social media like Twitter, have been instrumental and are actively researched areas. In this work, we have focused on something quite insidious in the current context, i.e., air pollution in developing regions. Starting as an empirical study on using Twitter as a "Sensor" to measure air quality, the focal point of this work is to identify the users who have been actively tweeting in the air pollution events in Delhi, the capital of India. From these users, we try to identify the influential ones, who play a significant role in creating the initial awareness and hence act as "Sensors". We have utilized a tailored "TRank" algorithm for finding out the influential users by considering \textit{Retweet, Favorite, and Follower influence} of the users. After ranking the users based on their social influence, we further study the behavior, i.e., perception of pollution from those users' posts with respect to the actual air pollution levels using the physical sensors. The tracking of influential users in air quality monitoring assists in developing a crowd sensed air quality measurement framework, which can augment the physical air quality sensors for raising awareness against air pollution.
title AirCalypse: Can Twitter Help in Urban Air Quality Measurement and Who are the Influential Users?
topic Physics and Society
Computers and Society
Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.19421