Twitter Created a New GUI for Academics with Historical Data Access
Twitter Created a New GUI for Academics with Historical Data Access A question I get weekly concerns how to access historical Twitter and other types of social data. I have developed a stock answer that goes out in the confirmations when an academic signs up for a free DiscoverText account and excerpts of it appear below with an update. Currently new academic users get a 10-user license for 12 months to store 500,000 Tweets or other text data units on DiscoverText. The training is free. The big news is that Twitter recently created a new graphical user interface for accessing historical Twitter in JSON format. Several PhD candidates reported to me this was news to them when I pointed to the URL, so I am sharing the updated academic user form letter below. --- If you want Twitter data that is historical, academics must apply directly to Twitter for special credentials: https://developer.twitter.com/en/products/twitter-api/academic-research Once you get the credentials, you could use Python to download the JSON format data: https://github.com/texifter/tools-for-twitter There is a fantastic new academic Twitter research GUI for those who may prefer skipping the Python steps altogether. https://developer.twitter.com/apitools/downloader This is an excellent addition to the academic Twitter ecosystem. These exported JSON files upload directly to DiscoverText for collaborative, web-based, TOS-compliant data science experiments using the Twitter display, deduplication, and machine-learning. You can upload historical Twitter data in JSON format to DiscoverText for analysis: https://vimeo.com/679097662 Many people also ask about Facebook, Instagram, and other social data. DiscoverText has not been connected to Facebook's open API since 2014. We do not store or access any social data except Twitter. A caveat is that some academics do have legal access to non-Twitter social data and that data, when stored in spreadsheets, can be uploaded by researchers into their DiscoverText account like any other spreadsheet: https://vimeo.com/622539257 No academic should study Twitter data in a spreadsheet until they have spent 7 minutes watching this "Case Against..." to which I have never heard a cogent rebuttal: https://vimeo.com/526218014 If you are a professor and you want to use DiscoverText in class, please send me a list of student emails and they will all get licenses directly issued. In general, feel free to let me know if you have questions or want a meeting about your research design or implementation. I look forward to supporting your work, ~Stu Dr. Stuart Shulman
participants (1)
-
Stuart Shulman