Wu, H. DenisGroshek, JacobElasmar, Michael G.2020-05-192020-05-192016-01-01H Denis Wu, Jacob Groshek, Michael G Elasmar. 2016. "Which countries does the world talk about? An examination of factors that shape country presence on Twitter." International Journal of Communication, Volume 10, pp. 1860 - 1877.1932-8036https://hdl.handle.net/2144/41032This study investigates which countries were mentioned most on Twitter during 2013 and what factors—country attributes, communication and economic resources, and contexts—can explain country presence on Twitter. Tweet mentions from 210 countries were derived using full fire hose archival searches. We identify trends that differ from the patterns found in news flow literature. And the results suggest a new era of international communication via Web-based social networks. Although core and semiperiphery countries are mentioned more than periphery countries, mobile phone penetration and sociopolitical instability have reshaped the contours of country images, and only 28% of the 50 most-mentioned countries on Twitter were core countries. This study discusses the implications of evolving social media for traditional news media outlets, world politics, and international relations.p. 1860 - 1877en-USAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internationalhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Social sciencesCommunicationTwitterPredictor of tweetsWorld system theoryMobile phoneCountry sizeSociopolitical instabilityNews flowInternational news coverageInternetDeterminantsMediaCommunicationGlobalizationSystemJournalism and professional writingCommunication and media studiesWhich countries does the world talk about? An examination of factors that shape country presence on TwitterArticle191681