Filtering the Intensity of Public Concern from Social Media Count Data with Jumps

20 Pages Posted: 18 Feb 2021

See all articles by Matteo Iacopini

Matteo Iacopini

Queen Mary University of London

Carlo Santagiustina

Sciences Po, médialab; Ca Foscari University of Venice - Department of Management

Date Written: December 24, 2020

Abstract

Count time series obtained from online social media data, such as Twitter, have drawn increasing interest among academics and market analysts over the past decade.
Transforming Web activity records into counts yields time series with peculiar features, including the coexistence of smooth paths and sudden jumps, as well as cross-sectional and temporal dependence.
Using Twitter posts about country risks for the United Kingdom and the United States, this paper proposes an innovative state space model for multivariate count data with jumps.
We use the proposed model to assess the impact of public concerns in these countries on market systems. To do so, public concerns inferred from Twitter data are unpacked into country-specific persistent terms, risk social amplification events, and co-movements of the country series.
The identified components are then used to investigate the existence and magnitude of country-risk spillovers and social amplification effects on the volatility of financial markets.

Suggested Citation

Iacopini, Matteo and Santagiustina, Carlo Romano Marcello Alessandro, Filtering the Intensity of Public Concern from Social Media Count Data with Jumps (December 24, 2020). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3754875 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3754875

Matteo Iacopini (Contact Author)

Queen Mary University of London ( email )

Mile End Road
London, E1 4NS
United Kingdom

Carlo Romano Marcello Alessandro Santagiustina

Sciences Po, médialab ( email )

27 rue St Guillaume
Paris, 75007
France

Ca Foscari University of Venice - Department of Management ( email )

San Giobbe, Cannaregio 873
Venice, 30121
Italy

HOME PAGE: http://www.unive.it/data/persone/11229706

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
35
Abstract Views
455
PlumX Metrics