This got me thinking about a similar project I did last year, in which I investigated the international media coverage of the Iraqi city of Kirkuk . I looked at two sets of newspaper articles, one from USA Today and one from the English-language website of the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet. I took every on-line article published by the two sources from 2007 to 2008 and analyzed word frequencies using a free piece of software called Yoshikoder, then compared the results. Going in, I hypothesized that Turkish coverage of Kirkuk would have more negatively-connoted words than American coverage, based on the fact that Turkey adamantly opposed the inclusion of Kirkuk in the Kurdish Autonomous Region. I was surprised to find, however, that USA Today's coverage had fewer positive words and more negative words than the Turkish sample.
Inspired by the WeatherSealed post, I decided to run the data through Wordle. You can see the results below. If you're interested in Wordle, you might also have a look at Tagxedo, which allows you to fit your word clouds to predefined shapes.
Word cloud based on USA Today. |
Word cloud based on Hurriyet. |
1 comment:
Welcome back. That's very cool and a surprising finding on Kirkuk coverage.
Thanks for the link to Tagxedo. I love Wordle and had never seen that one.
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