ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information (Jan 2019)

Social Media Big Data Mining and Spatio-Temporal Analysis on Public Emotions for Disaster Mitigation

  • Tengfei Yang,
  • Jibo Xie,
  • Guoqing Li,
  • Naixia Mou,
  • Zhenyu Li,
  • Chuanzhao Tian,
  • Jing Zhao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi8010029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 29

Abstract

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Social media contains a lot of geographic information and has been one of the more important data sources for hazard mitigation. Compared with the traditional means of disaster-related geographic information collection methods, social media has the characteristics of real-time information provision and low cost. Due to the development of big data mining technologies, it is now easier to extract useful disaster-related geographic information from social media big data. Additionally, many researchers have used related technology to study social media for disaster mitigation. However, few researchers have considered the extraction of public emotions (especially fine-grained emotions) as an attribute of disaster-related geographic information to aid in disaster mitigation. Combined with the powerful spatio-temporal analysis capabilities of geographical information systems (GISs), the public emotional information contained in social media could help us to understand disasters in more detail than can be obtained from traditional methods. However, the social media data is quite complex and fragmented, both in terms of format and semantics, especially for Chinese social media. Therefore, a more efficient algorithm is needed. In this paper, we consider the earthquake that happened in Ya’an, China in 2013 as a case study and introduce the deep learning method to extract fine-grained public emotional information from Chinese social media big data to assist in disaster analysis. By combining this with other geographic information data (such population density distribution data, POI (point of interest) data, etc.), we can further assist in the assessment of affected populations, explore emotional movement law, and optimize disaster mitigation strategies.

Keywords