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Harry Kewell holds the Twitter ball for Australia in South Africa

Harry Kewell holds the World Cup Twitter ball for Australia in South Africa

Kosmix’s Tweetbeat World Cup provides Twitter insight into Australia’s World Cup campaign

Harry Kewell was Australia’s most tweeted about player during Australia’s one-all draw with Ghana on Sunday morning amassing a total of 6,800 tweets over a three hour period, according to statistics from Kosmix’s Tweetbeat World Cup Twitter filter. Kewell, who ‘held the Twitter ball’ at the start of the game, quickly passed possession to Brett Holman at the 11th minute when he scored the Socceroos’ only goal. Twitter attention quickly returned to Kewell at the 15th minute mark where he maintained possession of the most Tweets for the rest of the game.

The number of tweets referencing Kewell peaked during the 24th minute when he was shown a red-card for handling the ball – a total of 1,769 tweets about Kewell were posted during a five minute period indicating that tweeting Australian World Cup fans were discussing the referee’s decision. The second most tweeted player was a battle between Brett Holman, Tim Cahill, Lukas Neill, and Craig Moore, with Holman taking second place with 617 tweets.

Whilst during the same period, the Socceroos were mentioned in tweets 25,140 times compared with Ghana who totalled 16,517 tweets. Ghana’s most tweeted player was Asamoah Gyan with 917 twitter mentions.

Tweetbeat World Cup filters Twitter in real-time to give fans the best commentary, news and opinions about the games, and to show what people are saying about the tournament right now. Tweetbeat scans up to 2000 tweets per second—more than 65 million tweets each day—to identify the most interesting and important comments about the FIFA World Cup™. Tweetbeat then organises these comments and presents them in real-time, so football fans can follow their team, see the most popular tweets trending now, and read what people are saying about the competition. A speed slider lets you speed up or slow down the flow of tweets displayed on the page, and a scoreboard shows which team has the most Twitter buzz for each game. Fans can retweet the best comments or follow other Twitter users right from the site. A mobile version of Tweetbeat is also available for the iPhone.

How Tweetbeat Works

Kosmix, the creator of Tweetbeat World Cup, has taken a semantic approach to filtering Twitter. Kosmix is one of the few companies with access to the complete Twitter firehose, and it has developed Tweetbeat by running the full Twitter stream through its categorisation engine. With more than 10 million nodes, the Kosmix categorisation engine is among the largest taxonomies of the Web and understands the relationship between things to an unprecedented degree. As a result, Tweetbeat World Cup goes beyond keywords or hashtags to surface tweets about the tournament, teams, players, stadiums and fans—even if the tweet does not contain the term “World Cup.”

Tweetbeat ranks tweets about the World Cup to eliminate spam, reduce the noise and to show what’s resonating right now. Tweet ranking is automatically determined by measuring a variety of signals including the number of retweets, who tweeted and retweeted, how many similar stories are trending up, and how fast the tweet topic is growing.

Kosmix is applying these techniques to the World Cup teams and players as a showcase of what its technology can do. Later this year the company will release a full version of Tweetbeat across all topics.

Links

Tweetbeat

Tweetbeat on Twitter

Tweetbeat on Facebook

Twitter’s own thoughts on Tweetbeat

Kosmix Blog