Limits of Electoral Predictions Using Twitter

Authors

  • Daniel Gayo-Avello Universidad de Oviedo
  • Panagiotis Metaxas Wellesley College
  • Eni Mustafaraj Wellesley College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v5i1.14189

Abstract

Using social media for political discourse is becoming common practice, especially around election time. One interesting aspect of this trend is the possibility of pulsing the public’s opinion about the elections, and that has attracted the interest of many researchers and the press. Allegedly, predicting electoral outcomes from social media data can be feasible and even simple. Positive results have been reported, but without an analysis on what principle enables them. Our work puts to test the purported predictive power of socialmedia metrics against the 2010 US congressional elections. Here, we applied techniques that had reportedly led to positive election predictions in the past, on the Twitter data collected from the 2010 US congressional elections. Unfortunately, we find no correlation between the analysis results and the electoral outcomes, contradicting previous reports. Observing that 80 years of polling research would support our findings, we argue that one should not be accepting predictions about events using social media data as a black box. Instead, scholarly research should be accompanied by a model explaining the predictive power of social media, when there is one.

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Published

2021-08-03

How to Cite

Gayo-Avello, D., Metaxas, P., & Mustafaraj, E. (2021). Limits of Electoral Predictions Using Twitter. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 5(1), 490-493. https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v5i1.14189