Supporting temporal analytics for health-related events in microblogs

Microblogging services, such as Twitter, are gaining interests as a means of sharing information in social networks. Numerous works have shown the potential of using Twitter posts (or tweets) in order to infer the existence and magnitude of real-world events. In the medical domain, there has been a surge in detecting public health related tweets for early warning so that a rapid response from health authorities can take place. In this paper, we present a temporal analytics tool for supporting a comparative, temporal analysis of disease outbreaks between Twitter and official sources, such as, World Health Organization (WHO) and ProMED-mail. We automatically extract and aggregate outbreak events from official outbreak reports, producing time series data. Our tool can support a correlation analysis and an understanding of the temporal developments of outbreak mentions in Twitter, based on comparisons with official sources.