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What the Language You Tweet Says About Your Occupation

Tianran Hu, Haoyuan Xiao, Jiebo Luo, Thuy-vy Thi Nguyen

2021Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Many aspects of people's lives are proven to be deeply connected to their jobs. In this paper, we first investigate the distinct characteristics of major occupation categories based on tweets. From multiple social media platforms, we gather several types of user information. From users' LinkedIn webpages, we learn their proficiencies. To overcome the ambiguity of self-reported information, a soft clustering approach is applied to extract occupations from crowd-sourced data. Eight job categories are extracted, including Marketing, Administrator, Start-up, Editor, Software Engineer, Public Relation, Office Clerk, and Designer. Meanwhile, users' posts on Twitter provide cues for understanding their linguistic styles, interests, and personalities. Our results suggest that people of different jobs have unique tendencies in certain language styles and interests. Our results also clearly reveal distinctive levels in terms of Big Five Traits for different jobs. Finally, a classifier is built to predict job types based on the features extracted from tweets. A high accuracy indicates a strong discrimination power of language features for job prediction task.

Topics & Concepts

AmbiguityPersonality psychologyComputer scienceCluster analysisClassifier (UML)Social mediaWorld Wide WebTask (project management)Artificial intelligenceNatural language processingData scienceInformation retrievalPsychologySocial psychologyEngineeringPersonalitySystems engineeringProgramming languageSentiment Analysis and Opinion MiningOnline Learning and Analytics
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