Abstract is missing.
- Language-independent Gender Prediction on TwitterNikola Ljubesic, Darja Fiser, Tomaz Erjavec. 1-6 [doi]
- When does a compliment become sexist? Analysis and classification of ambivalent sexism using twitter dataAkshita Jha, Radhika Mamidi. 7-16 [doi]
- Personality Driven Differences in Paraphrase PreferenceDaniel Preotiuc-Pietro, Jordan Carpenter, Lyle H. Ungar. 17-26 [doi]
- community2vec: Vector representations of online communities encode semantic relationshipsTrevor Martin. 27-31 [doi]
- Telling Apart Tweets Associated with Controversial versus Non-Controversial TopicsAseel Addawood, Rezvaneh Rezapour, Omid Abdar, Jana Diesner. 32-41 [doi]
- Cross-Lingual Classification of Topics in Political TextsGoran Glavas, Federico Nanni, Simone Paolo Ponzetto. 42-46 [doi]
- Mining Social Science Publications for Survey VariablesAndrea Zielinski, Peter Mutschke. 47-52 [doi]
- Linguistic Markers of Influence in Informal InteractionsShrimai Prabhumoye, Samridhi Choudhary, Evangelia Spiliopoulou, Christopher Bogart, Carolyn Penstein Rosé, Alan W. Black. 53-62 [doi]
- Non-lexical Features Encode Political Affiliation on TwitterRachael Tatman, Leo Stewart, Amandalynne Paullada, Emma S. Spiro. 63-67 [doi]
- Modelling Participation in Small Group Social Sequences with Markov Rewards AnalysisGabriel Murray. 68-72 [doi]
- Code-Switching as a Social Act: The Case of Arabic Wikipedia Talk PagesMichael Yoder, Shruti Rijhwani, Carolyn Penstein Rosé, Lori S. Levin. 73-82 [doi]
- How Does Twitter User Behavior Vary Across Demographic Groups?Zach Wood-Doughty, Michael Smith, David A. Broniatowski, Mark Dredze. 83-89 [doi]
- Ideological Phrase Indicators for Classification of Political Discourse Framing on TwitterKristen Johnson, I-Ta Lee, Dan Goldwasser. 90-99 [doi]