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Twitter wants Massachusetts Institute of Technology to make sense of your tweets

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Twitter has teamed up with MIT on a USD 10 million project that will analyse every tweet sent since the micro-blogging site was launched in 2006 in an effort to better understand social networks.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab has announced the creation of the Laboratory for Social Machines (LSM), funded by a five-year USD 10 million commitment from Twitter.

As part of the new programme, Twitter will provide full access to its real-time, public stream of tweets, as well as the archive of every tweet dating back to the first.

The new initiative will focus on the development of new technologies to make sense of semantic and social patterns across the broad span of public mass media, social media, data streams, and digital content.

Pattern discovery and data visualisation will be explored to show interaction patterns and shared interests in relevant social systems, while collaborative tools and mobile apps will be developed to enable new forms of public communication and social organisation.

A main goal for the LSM will be to create new platforms for both individuals and institutions to identify, discuss, and act on pressing societal problems.
Though funded by Twitter, the LSM will have complete operational and academic independence.

In keeping with the academic mission of LSM, students and staff will work across many social media and mass media platforms - including, but not limited to, Twitter.

"The Laboratory for Social Machines will experiment in areas of public communication and social organisation where humans and machines collaborate on problems that can't be solved manually or through automation alone," said Deb Roy, an associate professor at the Media Lab who will lead the LSM, and who also serves as Twitter's chief media scientist.

"Social feedback loops based on analysis of public media and data can be an effective catalyst for increasing accountability and transparency ? creating mutual visibility among institutions and individuals," said Roy.

"With this investment, Twitter is seizing the opportunity to go deeper into research to understand the role Twitter and other platforms play in the way people communicate, the effect that rapid and fluid communication can have and apply those findings to complex societal issues," said Dick Costolo, CEO of Twitter.

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