Researchers create system to quickly identify Ukraine atrocities using social media
Experts from universities in the UK and the USA have repurposed their research activities to quickly create a system which provides a running account of atrocities taking place in Ukraine, constructed from social media accounts located in the country.
, an existing project about Ukrainians at home and abroad funded by ESRC and ORA, has responded to the humanitarian emergency by combining their expertise with that of three other institutions in the USA. Their quick thinking means they can now document and trace the displacement of people, human rights abuses, humanitarian needs and civil resistance to invasion 鈥 all in real time.
The new project analyses Twitter data using machine-learning algorithms - it is able to flag important events a few hours ahead of media outlets by demonstrating spikes of credible tweets about certain subjects the team is tracking, as well as mapping where these events take place. It focuses on four areas - humanitarian needs, displaced people, civilian resistance and human rights violations.
Dr Olga Onuch, a Ukrainian Senior Politics Lecturer from The University of Manchester, identified which accounts to monitor and created a list of more than 600 keywords for the system to check. It captures living language - for instance, a protest may be referred to in Ukrainian or Russian with the Soviet-era colloquialism of a 鈥榤eeting鈥.
She hopes the work can help in two ways: in the moment, by helping aid agencies direct resources to people fleeing fighting, and in the long term, by permanently documenting abuses and atrocities for eventual justice.
In one instance, its tracking of civilian resistance and human rights abuses was able to immediately identify the beginning of a major event - Russian forces firing on peaceful protesters in the southern city of Kherson on March 21 鈥 as it registered as a spike on one of the main graphs on the project鈥檚 website.
If they have special or technical knowledge that can be useful, social scientists have a duty in a time of crisis to use it - even if they can鈥檛 directly save human lives, they can use it to record what happened.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an early alarm system for human rights abuses,鈥 explains Ernesto Calvo of the University of Maryland. 鈥淔or it to work, we need to know two basic things: what is happening or being reported, and who is reporting those things.鈥
Calvo and his lab focus on the second of those two requirements, and constructed a 鈥渃ommunity detection鈥 system to identify key groups of Twitter users from which to gather data 鈥 meaning that millions of tweets now feed into the system every day.
Erik Wibbels of Duke University handles the project鈥檚 natural language processing element, using AI and the keyword list developed by Onuch and others to analyse what the tweets are about; political science Professor Graeme Robertson of the University of North Carolina and his colleagues provide expertise on the region; and scholars from the Kyiv School of Economics are helping to validate the system鈥檚 performance.
The war in Ukraine may be the first war to use social media data in this way, but it won鈥檛 be the last - analysing social media data is likely to become an increasingly prevalent way to monitor conflicts, as well as other crises and key moments in future history, said Calvo. The tool, and the reports it is producing, also has potential for major impact on policy and human rights documentation procedures in UK and internationally.
For more information about Data for Ukraine, visit