"The ability of social networks to produce information on heavy traffic, road hazards, quality of service of public transportation and more is valuable to decision makers," said Dr Tsvi Kuflik, the Head of the Information Systems Department at the University of Haifa.
One of the major needs of decision makers and planners in the field of transportation is to get real-time information on transportation issues such as heavy traffic, "bottlenecks", safety hazards, availability or unavailability of public transport, researchers said.
Authorities and planners in the field of transportation must be able to prepare and address days of mass events differently than other regular days, researchers said.
The three year study began in 2011 and was led by Dr Susan Grant-Muller from the Institute of Transport Studies at the University of Leeds.
Researchers chose to focus on Twitter because it is a public social network and mainly because of its short messages that enable to extract relevant information with relative ease.
The tweets that were found were arranged according to specific subjects.
The system turned out to be successful beyond their imagination: it found over 1100 tweets that were somehow connected to transport, 900 of which were related to problems experienced by users and that were caused by the games hosted by Liverpool.
Approximately 16 per cent of the messages were reports of unusual events like accidents. The main complaints were related to crowded busses and trains, availability, accuracy of transport services and long travel times.
"Our research shows that the information people tweet on Twitter is an "information gold mine" that has not been used yet. Correct identification of relevant tweets from Twitter can provide first hand information about the problems, complaints and customer expectations - in our case, of the citizens themselves - and enable policy makers to better plan the steps they need to take," researchers said.
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