1
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      EPIC: An Epidemics Corpus Of Over 20 Million Relevant Tweets

      Preprint

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Since the start of COVID-19, several relevant corpora from various sources are presented in the literature that contain millions of data points. While these corpora are valuable in supporting many analyses on this specific pandemic, researchers require additional benchmark corpora that contain other epidemics to facilitate cross-epidemic pattern recognition and trend analysis tasks. During our other efforts on COVID-19 related work, we discover very little disease related corpora in the literature that are sizable and rich enough to support such cross-epidemic analysis tasks. In this paper, we present EPIC, a large-scale epidemic corpus that contains 20 millions micro-blog posts, i.e., tweets crawled from Twitter, from year 2006 to 2020. EPIC contains a subset of 17.8 millions tweets related to three general diseases, namely Ebola, Cholera and Swine Flu, and another subset of 3.5 millions tweets of six global epidemic outbreaks, including 2009 H1N1 Swine Flu, 2010 Haiti Cholera, 2012 Middle-East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS), 2013 West African Ebola, 2016 Yemen Cholera and 2018 Kivu Ebola. Furthermore, we explore and discuss the properties of the corpus with statistics of key terms and hashtags and trends analysis for each subset. Finally, we demonstrate the value and impact that EPIC could create through a discussion of multiple use cases of cross-epidemic research topics that attract growing interest in recent years. These use cases span multiple research areas, such as epidemiological modeling, pattern recognition, natural language understanding and economical modeling.

          Related collections

          Author and article information

          Journal
          09 June 2020
          Article
          2006.08369
          e2d3495c-a1c8-4544-bcc8-d326a1a07bdb

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          cs.SI cs.CL cs.CY

          Social & Information networks,Theoretical computer science,Applied computer science

          Comments

          Comment on this article