Geo-Information Harvesting from Social Media Data
This work tackles the problem of leveraging social media data for geographic applications, but it is incremental as it synthesizes existing knowledge rather than introducing new methods.
The paper addresses the challenge of harvesting geo-information from social media data, which offers complementary perspectives to remote sensing but suffers from unknown quality, and provides a comprehensive overview of key aspects including data preparation, extraction, fusion, and ethical considerations to guide future research.
As unconventional sources of geo-information, massive imagery and text messages from open platforms and social media form a temporally quasi-seamless, spatially multi-perspective stream, but with unknown and diverse quality. Due to its complementarity to remote sensing data, geo-information from these sources offers promising perspectives, but harvesting is not trivial due to its data characteristics. In this article, we address key aspects in the field, including data availability, analysis-ready data preparation and data management, geo-information extraction from social media text messages and images, and the fusion of social media and remote sensing data. We then showcase some exemplary geographic applications. In addition, we present the first extensive discussion of ethical considerations of social media data in the context of geo-information harvesting and geographic applications. With this effort, we wish to stimulate curiosity and lay the groundwork for researchers who intend to explore social media data for geo-applications. We encourage the community to join forces by sharing their code and data.