Tracking the Press: Minister Networks
About a week ago, I discussed tracking Canadian MPs based on the number of times they get mentioned in various news media, and who they get mentioned with. At the time, I only showed a chart of mentions, and discussed some shortcomings of the approaches used for tracking politicians -- or, for that matter, any brands.
I've been working on improving my tracking software and also working on new visualizations. The work has culminated in the network below, and a high quality PDF version is also available:

This network tracks Canadian federal ministers in various blogs, magazines, and newspapers. The size of the circle with the minister's name represents the number of articles (i.e. the larger the circle, the more articles), while a connection exists between ministers if they have been mentioned together in at least one article or blog post over the last week.
Such a network representation provides very useful information about press coverage of Canadian ministers. A great example is that Prime Minister Stephen Harper gets mentioned very often relative to other ministers, but is not mentioned often with other ministers. Tony Clement or Jim Prentice, on the other hand, get mentioned with more ministers, but have fewer articles about them.
One thing the network does not show, however, is how often the co-mentions occur. It's possible, for example, that a set of five or six ministers was mentioned in one article, and this would create something like the dense set of connections with ministers Flaherty, Prentice, Clement, and others. More information would be necessary to analyze whether this is the case or not.
Stay tuned for more updates on the software. I also hope to have a website set up where this is all done automatically and people can peruse social media surrounding Canadian politics.
