Sandra Garcia Esparza, Michael P. O'Mahony, Barry Smyth
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CatStream: categorising tweets for user profiling and stream filtering
Real-time information streams such as Twitter have become a common way for users to discover new information. For most users this means curating a set of other users to follow. However, at the moment the following granularity of Twitter is restricted to the level of individual users. Our research has highlighted that many following relationships are motivated by a subset of interests that are shared by the users in question. For example, user A might follow user B because of their technology related tweets, but shares little or no interest in their other tweets. As a result, this all-or-nothing following relationship can quickly overwhelm users' timelines with extraneous information. To improve this situation we propose a user profiling approach based on the topical categorisation of users' posted URLs. These topics can then be used to filter information streams so that they focus on more relevant information from the people they follow, based on their core interests. In particular, we present a system called CatStream that provides for a more fine-grained way to follow users on specific topics and filter our timelines accordingly. We present the results of a live-user study that shows how filtered timelines offer a better way to organise and filter their information streams. Most importantly users are generally satisfied with the categories predicted for their profiles and tweets.