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Dive into the research topics where Mark A. Cameron is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark A. Cameron.


IEEE Intelligent Systems | 2012

Using Social Media to Enhance Emergency Situation Awareness

Jie Yin; Andrew Lampert; Mark A. Cameron; Bella Robinson; Robert Power

The described system uses natural language processing and data mining techniques to extract situation awareness information from Twitter messages generated during various disasters and crises.


international world wide web conferences | 2012

Emergency situation awareness from twitter for crisis management

Mark A. Cameron; Robert Power; Bella Robinson; Jie Yin

This paper describes ongoing work with the Australian Government to detect, assess, summarise, and report messages of interest for crisis coordination published by Twitter. The developed platform and client tools, collectively termed the Emergency Situation Awareness - Automated Web Text Mining (ESA-AWTM) system, demonstrate how relevant Twitter messages can be identified and utilised to inform the situation awareness of an emergency incident as it unfolds. A description of the ESA-AWTM platform is presented detailing how it may be used for real life emergency management scenarios. These scenarios are focused on general use cases to provide: evidence of pre-incident activity; near-real-time notification of an incident occurring; first-hand reports of incident impacts; and gauging the community response to an emergency warning. Our tools have recently been deployed in a trial for use by crisis coordinators.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Understanding Human Mobility from Twitter.

Raja Jurdak; Kun Zhao; Jiajun Liu; Maurice AbouJaoude; Mark A. Cameron; David Newth

Understanding human mobility is crucial for a broad range of applications from disease prediction to communication networks. Most efforts on studying human mobility have so far used private and low resolution data, such as call data records. Here, we propose Twitter as a proxy for human mobility, as it relies on publicly available data and provides high resolution positioning when users opt to geotag their tweets with their current location. We analyse a Twitter dataset with more than six million geotagged tweets posted in Australia, and we demonstrate that Twitter can be a reliable source for studying human mobility patterns. Our analysis shows that geotagged tweets can capture rich features of human mobility, such as the diversity of movement orbits among individuals and of movements within and between cities. We also find that short- and long-distance movers both spend most of their time in large metropolitan areas, in contrast with intermediate-distance movers’ movements, reflecting the impact of different modes of travel. Our study provides solid evidence that Twitter can indeed be a useful proxy for tracking and predicting human movement.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Using Social Media for Actionable Disease Surveillance and Outbreak Management: A Systematic Literature Review

Lauren Charles-Smith; Tera Reynolds; Mark A. Cameron; Mike Conway; Eric H. Y. Lau; Jennifer M. Olsen; Julie A. Pavlin; Mika Shigematsu; Laura Streichert; Katie J. Suda; Courtney D. Corley

Objective Research studies show that social media may be valuable tools in the disease surveillance toolkit used for improving public health professionals’ ability to detect disease outbreaks faster than traditional methods and to enhance outbreak response. A social media work group, consisting of surveillance practitioners, academic researchers, and other subject matter experts convened by the International Society for Disease Surveillance, conducted a systematic primary literature review using the PRISMA framework to identify research, published through February 2013, answering either of the following questions: Can social media be integrated into disease surveillance practice and outbreak management to support and improve public health? Can social media be used to effectively target populations, specifically vulnerable populations, to test an intervention and interact with a community to improve health outcomes? Examples of social media included are Facebook, MySpace, microblogs (e.g., Twitter), blogs, and discussion forums. For Question 1, 33 manuscripts were identified, starting in 2009 with topics on Influenza-like Illnesses (n = 15), Infectious Diseases (n = 6), Non-infectious Diseases (n = 4), Medication and Vaccines (n = 3), and Other (n = 5). For Question 2, 32 manuscripts were identified, the first in 2000 with topics on Health Risk Behaviors (n = 10), Infectious Diseases (n = 3), Non-infectious Diseases (n = 9), and Other (n = 10). Conclusions The literature on the use of social media to support public health practice has identified many gaps and biases in current knowledge. Despite the potential for success identified in exploratory studies, there are limited studies on interventions and little use of social media in practice. However, information gleaned from the articles demonstrates the effectiveness of social media in supporting and improving public health and in identifying target populations for intervention. A primary recommendation resulting from the review is to identify opportunities that enable public health professionals to integrate social media analytics into disease surveillance and outbreak management practice.


international world wide web conferences | 2013

A sensitive Twitter earthquake detector

Bella Robinson; Robert Power; Mark A. Cameron

This paper describes early work at developing an earthquake detector for Australia and New Zealand using Twitter. The system is based on the Emergency Situation Awareness (ESA) platform which provides all-hazard information captured, filtered and analysed from Twitter. The detector sends email notifications of evidence of earthquakes from Tweets to the Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre. The earthquake detector uses the ESA platform to monitor Tweets and checks for specific earthquake related alerts. The Tweets that contribute to an alert are then examined to determine their locations: when the Tweets are identified as being geographically close and the retweet percentage is low an email notification is generated. The earthquake detector has been in operation since December 2012 with 31 notifications generated where 17 corresponded with real, although minor, earthquake events. The remaining 14 were a result of discussions about earthquakes but not prompted by an event. A simple modification to our algorithm results in 20 notifications identifying the same 17 real events and reducing the false positives to 3. Our detector is sensitive in that it can generate alerts from only a few Tweets when they are determined to be geographically close.


conference on information and knowledge management | 2012

ESA: emergency situation awareness via microbloggers

Jie Yin; Sarvnaz Karimi; Bella Robinson; Mark A. Cameron

During a disastrous event, such as an earthquake or river flooding, information on what happened, who was affected and how, where help is needed, and how to aid people who were affected, is crucial. While communication is important in such times of crisis, damage to infrastructure such as telephone lines makes it difficult for authorities and victims to communicate. Microblogging has played a critical role as an important communication platform during crises when other media has failed. We demonstrate our ESA (Emergency Situation Awareness) system that mines microblogs in real-time to extract and visualise useful information about incidents and their impact on the community in order to equip the right authorities and the general public with situational awareness.


International Journal of Geographic Information Systems | 1992

Environmental decision support system project: an exploration of alternative architectures for geographical information systems

David J. Abel; S. K. Yap; Ross G. Ackland; Mark A. Cameron; D. F. Smith; Gavin Walker

Abstract Recent changes in information technology offer the opportunity to explore alternative architectures for geographical information systems (GIS) which might better support advanced applications. This paper describes the architecture and implementation of the environmental decision support system (EDSS), a prototype GIS tool kit. The architecture is based on a simple yet powerful systems model using only data collections, views and operations as the basic entity types. The design of the user interface, data management and data analysis within the model are outlined, with particular emphasis on the advanced facilities for which implementation is simplified by the architecture. A prototype applications system, BANKSIA, is also described.


international conference on information systems | 2014

Emergency Situation Awareness: Twitter Case Studies

Robert Power; Bella Robinson; John Colton; Mark A. Cameron

The Emergency Situation Awareness (ESA) system provides all-hazard situation awareness information for emergency managers using content gathered from the public Twitter API. It collects, filters and analyses Tweets from specific regions of interest in near-real-time, enabling effective alerting for unexpected incidents and monitoring of emergency events with results accessible via an interactive website.


statistical and scientific database management | 2004

A service oriented architecture for a health research data network

Kerry Taylor; Christine M. O'Keefe; John Colton; Rohan A. Baxter; Ross Sparks; Uma Srinivasan; Mark A. Cameron; Laurent Lefort

This paper reports on an architecture aimed at providing a technology platform for a new research facility, called the Health Research Data Network (HRDN). The two key features - custodial control over access and use of resources; and confidentiality protection integrated into a secure end-to-end system for data sharing and analysis - distinguish HRDN from other service oriented architectures for distributed data sharing and analysis.


ieee congress on services | 2008

XML Schema Representation and Reasoning: A Description Logic Method

Xiaobing Wu; David Ratcliffe; Mark A. Cameron

XML plays a key role in service-oriented computing (SOC). We envisage an environment where knowledge workers are developing semantic correspondences from XML schemas to a target ontology. We would like to use DL reasoning services within this environment to assist the knowledge worker in the following three tasks: establishing the correctness of structural correspondences; the implications of correspondences; and finally, search and selection of schemas with semantic and structural constraints. A knowledge representation method for XML schemas using a description logic language is presented. With this representation method, it is now possible to use the underlying DL reasoning services to achieve our three tasks: correspondence correctness checking through DL model validation; correspondence implication through DL model completion; and finally, semantic and structural search and selection through DL model query.

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Bella Robinson

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Robert Power

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Kerry Taylor

Australian National University

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John Colton

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Jie Yin

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Ross Sparks

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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David J. Abel

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Laurent Lefort

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Raja Jurdak

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Ross G. Ackland

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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