Marketing 3 min read

Social Media Helps Wildfire, Smoke Exposure Researchers

Arena Creative | Shutterstock.com

Arena Creative | Shutterstock.com

Apparently, there’s a correlation between wildfire smoke and social media. Who would have thought?

A new-age research study was conducted by atmospheric scientists at Colorado State University after noticing that people flock to social media, particularly Facebook, to discuss the smoke and fire they see during the summer wildfire season.

The study was led by Bonne Ford, a research scientist who works in the lab of Associate Professor Jeff Pierce.

The idea of Facebook as a monitoring tool was borne out of an interdisciplinary meeting organized by distinguished Professor A. R. Ravishankara of the Department of Chemistry at Colorado State University.

“Facebook does a better job at spotting smoke exposure than satellite data.”  

The meeting brought together regional scientists, government officials and emergency management authorities who were working to find better ways to monitor smoke exposure.

In addition to the existing monitoring systems in place, they thought a great additional tool would be people’s reactions to smoke exposure.

The best medium to get people to tell them was social media, hence Facebook.

People post about smoke exposure to Facebook--scientists notice.Click To Tweet

Facebook Research

Using aggregated city-level data of posts from Facebook users from U.S. and Canada, the researchers created daily maps that were compared with data maps of standard smoke monitoring systems.

“An animation illustrates Facebook users posting about wildfire smoke (indicated by red, yellow and orange). These posts are compared with standard satellite measurements of smoke in the atmosphere, and surface measurements of particles (colored circles), during August 2015.”
| Bonne Ford/Colorado State University

Facebook users who made posts with the words “haze,” “smoke” and “fire,” were included in the count.

This was done in partnership with Facebook’s data scientist Moira Burke during the period of June 5th to Oct. 27th, 2015.

Findings

The study found a strong correlation between Facebook users who posted about visible smoke and conventional datasets like chemical transport models and surface particulate matter measurements used for measuring harmful smoke exposure.

Additionally, the study concluded that Facebook does a better job at spotting smoke exposure than satellite data.  

This, Pierce said is because the satellites capture smoke from above and thus data can be misleading.

“Sometimes, the satellites can’t tell what altitude the smoke is at” 

What Next?

The researchers hope to use the findings of the study to further develop ways to assess smoke exposure.

With Facebook’s existing Safety Check feature in full swing, it won’t be long before data gets more accurate.

More accurate data means better assessment.

Are you near any large fires? Make sure you post about it!

First AI Web Content Optimization Platform Just for Writers

Found this article interesting?

Let Chris Parbey know how much you appreciate this article by clicking the heart icon and by sharing this article on social media.


Profile Image

Chris Parbey

Comments (0)
Most Recent most recent
You
share Scroll to top

Link Copied Successfully

Sign in

Sign in to access your personalized homepage, follow authors and topics you love, and clap for stories that matter to you.

Sign in with Google Sign in with Facebook

By using our site you agree to our privacy policy.