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  2. Social media intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media_intelligence

    Social media intelligence (SMI or SOCMINT) comprises the collective tools and solutions that allow organizations to analyze conversations, respond to synchronize social signals, and synthesize social data points into meaningful trends and analysis, based on the user's needs. Social media intelligence allows one to utilize intelligence gathering ...

  3. Social media analytics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media_analytics

    Social media analytics or social media monitoring is the process of gathering and analyzing data from social networks such as Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, or Twitter. A part of social media analytics is called social media monitoring or social listening. It is commonly used by marketers to track online conversations about products and companies.

  4. Social data analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_data_analysis

    In short, social data analytics involves the analysis of social media in order to understand and surface insights which is embedded within the data. [ 1 ] Social data analysis can provide a new slant on business intelligence where social exploration of data can lead to important insights that the user of analytics did not envisage/explore.

  5. Behavioral analytics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioral_analytics

    Behavioral analysis allows future actions and trends to be predicted based on the collection of such data. Since the analysis requires collection and aggregation of large amounts of personal data, including highly sensitive one (such as sexual orientation or sexual preferences, health issues, location) which is then traded between hundreds of ...

  6. Social network analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_network_analysis

    Some common network analysis applications include data aggregation and mining, network propagation modeling, network modeling and sampling, user attribute and behavior analysis, community-maintained resource support, location-based interaction analysis, social sharing and filtering, recommender systems development, and link prediction and ...

  7. Active users - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_users

    Active users is a software performance metric that is commonly used to measure the level of engagement for a particular software product or object, by quantifying the number of active interactions from users or visitors within a relevant range of time (daily, weekly and monthly).

  8. Profiling (information science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Profiling_(information...

    In information science, profiling refers to the process of construction and application of user profiles generated by computerized data analysis. This is the use of algorithms or other mathematical techniques that allow the discovery of patterns or correlations in large quantities of data, aggregated in databases.

  9. Social profiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_profiling

    Social profiling is an emerging approach to overcome the challenges faced in meeting user's demands by introducing the concept of personalized search while keeping in consideration user profiles generated using social network data. A study reviews and classifies research inferring users social profile attributes from social media data as ...