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Searsen - SEarch, ARticle, SENtiment

An attempt to use Google Trends, Twitter and Wikipedia to find the relation between interest, search and opinion

Introduction and desired goal

Google, togheter with the social networks, is a useful source of informations on how a theme is perceived in a specific geographic area. Both Google, Wikipedia and Twitter have a set of powerful API to get the trending topics and get informations about specific keywords. Google Trends data are normalized in a 0-100 range. The desired goal is to perform an analysis, building a dataset with the trends of Google, Twitter and Wikipedia and their intersections. Searsen is able to automatically build this dataset, fetching the hot trends from Google, the trending topics from Twitter and the trending articles from Wikipedia, plus some further steps and elaborations, incuding a sentment analysis: this dataset is used to understand the similarities and the correlations between this three kind of interactions: search, information, opinion.

The language used is english(US), and previously italian.

The results of this system were used to write and publish a paper during the HCI International 2020. You can find it here.

Project structure

At the time of writing, the project consistis in 8 main files (3 for data extraction, 4 for data analysis and enrichment, 1 for process automation):

  • extraction_twitter ▶️ extracts data from Twitter. It can extract both time series, trending topics or tweets for a given keyword.
  • extraction_google ▶️ extracts data from Google. It can extract both time series or hot trends.
  • extraction_wikipedia ▶️ extracts data from Wikipedia. It can extract both time series or trending articles.
  • keyword_matcher ▶️ contains a number of matching criteria, to detect the eventual relation between two different queries or to match similar or identical keywords. it can perform a quick test on each algorithm and plot the ROG and Precision-Recall curves, if possible.
  • searsen_timeseries ▶️ fetches, analyzes or plots one or more timeseries on user input. Useful to compare the overall trends of a keyword or enrich the data. [WIP]
  • searsen_trends ▶️ aggregates the current time, the Twitter trending topics, the Google hot trends and the Wikipedia top articles in a single csv file or in a MongoDB table, thus generating a dataset. It also gets a list of tweets for each topic contained both in hot trends and trending topics and calculates the sentiment.
  • searsen_analyzer ▶️ useful functions to analyze and get results from the dataset built using searse_trends. It allows different type of automatic and manual operations.
  • searsen_automate ▶️ a batch file to execute the dataset generator.It can be used to automate the execution of the script on a Windows machine, using the Windows Task Scheduler. Remember to set the right full path to the searsen_trending script in your machine.

How to

Searsen requires some libraries (listed below) to work, plus some extra informations. Create a file called searsen_credentials.py, and make sure it contains:

  • The credentials of your Twitter application. To create one, simply create a developer account on Twitter.
  • The credentials of your MongoDB Atlas, if it's being used.
  • The full path to the language folder for Sentistrength, and the full path for the Sentistrength .jar file. Sentistrength and the language packs are not included, but you can easily find the language packs online, and request the jar by contacting the owner.

Libraries and external requirements

Searsen uses some third party software to work properly. Some examples are:

  • Pytrends
  • Tweepy (including the credentials of a Twitter application)
  • Pageview API
  • Sentistrength (Python API + java version and language packs)
  • Pandas
  • Numpy
  • Pickle
  • Pymongo (MongoDB Atlas or local)
  • Difflib
  • Sematch (manual modification needed to adapt the library to Python 3 at the time of writing)
  • Python-Levenshtein
  • FuzzyWuzzy
  • Tagme
  • Matplotlib
  • Seaborn

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📊 An attempt to use Google Trends, Twitter and Wikipedia to find the relation between interest, search and opinion

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