This word cloud shows Twitter posts by Malcolm Turnbull MP during the time of the researchers' study.
When it comes to Saturday's federal election, Twitter users are clear: politicians who spend time in conversation get most out of the platform, and the Greens are exploiting this better than the major parties, according to a new ANU study. The study, led by Dr Will Grant of the Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science at ANU, analysed the Twitter feeds of 152 Australian politicians to measure their influence on the social networking site and how they are using it to connect with voters. The researchers found that overwhelmingly, conversation online was what added to a politician's influence on Twitter, and that the Greens were more effectively using Twitter to engage with Australians than Labor or the Coalition. That dialogue with voters means the Greens' views are being dispersed to a wider audience through 'retweets' and their party is getting more political space online than they have received in the mainstream media. Dr Grant - aka @willozap on Twitter - said that by using Twitter for dialogue with Australians, the Greens are extending their reach to voters beyond the conventional media. 'Greens politicians are more likely than those in either the Labor party or the Coalition to use Twitter for political dialogue,' said Dr Grant. 'And those politicians who engage in dialogue through Twitter get statistically more out of it, because their tweets are more likely to be retweeted ' passed on or endorsed.' 'The lesson for politicians and their parties from this research is that if politicians want people to pass on their ideas, then they need to engage in conversation.
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