From Social Data Mining to Forecasting Socio-Economic Crisis
Dirk Helbing, Stefano Balietti

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential of socio-economic data mining and forecasting to better understand and predict crises, emphasizing infrastructure, privacy, and legal considerations for effective implementation.
Contribution
It proposes a framework for large-scale data mining infrastructure and Crisis Observatories to enable early warning systems for socio-economic crises.
Findings
Data mining can improve crisis prediction accuracy
Distributed infrastructure is essential for handling big socio-economic data
Privacy and legal issues are critical for responsible data use
Abstract
Socio-economic data mining has a great potential in terms of gaining a better understanding of problems that our economy and society are facing, such as financial instability, shortages of resources, or conflicts. Without large-scale data mining, progress in these areas seems hard or impossible. Therefore, a suitable, distributed data mining infrastructure and research centers should be built in Europe. It also appears appropriate to build a network of Crisis Observatories. They can be imagined as laboratories devoted to the gathering and processing of enormous volumes of data on both natural systems such as the Earth and its ecosystem, as well as on human techno-socio-economic systems, so as to gain early warnings of impending events. Reality mining provides the chance to adapt more quickly and more accurately to changing situations. Further opportunities arise by individually…
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