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  • LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: King Salmon and the soap boxes at the foot of The Mound in Princes Street

  • Pevensey Timeline Association presents: HEARTH AND HOME

  • Moving projects forward: Green activists seed quiet revolution in local parish councils

  • MAJOR WATER INCIDENT UPDATE: Relief all round as Pevensey Bay sees water supplies back on early evening Sunday

  • Wealden District Council Election—The tectonic plates in Pevensey did not move

  • Huw Merriman becomes Conservative MP for Bexhill and Battle with thank you to people for their support 'in vote and deed'

  • Election Day, 7 May 2015

  • Sea Defence Company Wins National Considerate Award

  • ELECTION 2015: BEXHILL AND BATTLE: Rachel Sadler, Liberal Democrats

  • St. Nicolas Church Pevensey, prepares for commanding performance as Battle Brass Band comes to town

  • Pevensey Heritage Walks on the horizon

  • Two sisters, one exhibition

  • First contract for Pevensey Whale merchandise awarded to local company

  • ELECTION 2015: Huw Merriman, Conservative candidate: Jobs, Homes and Investment

  • WEALDEN DISTRICT COUNCIL ELECTION ADDRESS: Jane Marter, Labour candidate: Defending the services that matter to you

  • Work continues at library damaged by flood: County Council update

  • Police appeal for information following Pevensey burglaries

  • Wealden District Council Elections: Candidates talk to local community, today Dianne Dear, for the Conservative Party

  • PEVENSEY TIMELINE TALK: Dr Mead Comes to Town

  • REVIEW: Pevensey Information Day

  • Local sports clubs benefit from over £21,000 of Wealden Community Support

  • Three men arrested after drugs found in Pevensey caravan

  • ELECTION 2015: Local Green Team pledges to maintain services for those in need

  • Huw Merriman: Hustings event, message to Bay Life

  • George Pitcher to chair unique hustings event at Priory Court Hotel

  • ELECTION 2015: Full House for the Priory Court Hotel Hustings

  • Fears for future of Pevensey Bay Library grow as books are removed from shelves

  • Second chapter begins in story of successful writing group

  • General election: University of Sussex to analyse the impact of Twitter on marginal seats on the south coast

  • Jewson is giving away £100,000 to help build better communities

  • New cafe set to open in the Bay

  • Story Writing added to Free Street Learning courses across Wealden

  • Police warning after glass found on slide at Pevensey Bay play area

  • Huw Merriman visits Little Gate Farm

  • Guiding our way to success

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Saturday, 16 May


HEADLINE : Green activists seed quiet revolution in local parish councils


EVENTBOARD : Pevensey Bay Car Boot Sale May 17 @ 6:15 am - 1:00 pm

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University of Sussex researchers will use ground-breaking ‘intelligent’ technology to scan and analyse thousands of political tweets during the UK general election campaign.

As the election campaign officially gets underway, researchers will be investigating the impact of social media on the battles for 15 key marginal constituencies on the south coast, including the UKIP leader Nigel Farage’s bid to become South Thanet’s MP and Caroline Lucas’ (Green) fight for re-election in Brighton Pavilion.

Experts in the University’s Informatics Department have developed unique software, called Method52, that uses complex algorithms to analyse and understand thousands of tweets to give a detailed portrait of public opinion on a particular issue.

With the Demos think tank, they have set up the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media (CASM) to learn how to ‘listen’ to conversations on social media.

They have already successfully used the technology to analyse ‘cheers’ and ‘boos’ during the 2014 football world cup, to monitor online misogyny, and to deduce the ‘winner’ of last year’s debates about Europe between politicians Nick Clegg and Nigel Farage.

Now they have joined up with media and politics academics to undertake this wide-ranging study of Twitter’s role in the battle for Downing Street, focusing on possible swing seats across Hampshire, Sussex and Kent.

Professor Ivor Gaber, Professor of Journalism at the University of Sussex, is leading the project. He says: “I don’t think we can say that this is ‘the social media election’ – tweets don’t win votes. As with all new communication technologies, the change is gradual.

“But I think that almost everybody agrees that social media will be very noisy in the campaign, which gives us a rich, largely untapped, resource to undertake some interesting analysis.

“For example, will we see a discernible ‘issues agenda’ that arises from social media? How will the different parties use tools like Twitter? What will be the balance of negative, supportive and humorous content?

“We have focused on the south coast because of its importance to the major parties and newcomers alike. If polls and forecasts are right, around half of the seats we are looking at could change hands.”

As well as analysing tweets, the team will also track key Facebook pages, blogs, YouTube videos, and party and candidate web pages.

In addition, local, regional and national media will be monitored to pick up all references to social media activity during the election campaign.

CASM has also partnered with the Sunday Times to provide weekly analysis of the major digital moments of the 2015 general election campaign.

The full list of coastal constituencies being studied is:

  • Kent – Dover, Folkestone and Hythe, and South Thanet
  • East Sussex – Brighton Kemptown, Brighton Pavilion, Eastbourne, Hastings and Rye, Hove, and Lewes
  • West Sussex – Bognor Regis and Littlehampton, and East Worthing and Shoreham
  • Hampshire – Eastleigh, Portsmouth South, Southampton Itchen and Southampton Test

Source
University of Sussex media release 31/3/14