New IR Data Set with 10 Million Dyadic Events 

 I thought you might be interested in a newly updated dataset of almost 10  million individually coded international events (1990-2004).  Each event is  summarized in the data as "Actor A does something to Actor B", with Actors A  and B coded for about 450 countries (and other actors) and "does something to"  coded in an ontology of about 200 types of actions.  The data are coded by a  computer "reading" millions of Reuters news reports. Will Lowe and I wrote an  article* that evaluated the software system (produced by VRA) that performs  this task and found that for the numbers of events it was possible to convince  humans (trained Harvard undergraduates) to coded by hand, the machine did as  well as the humans. However, in part since there is only so much pizza you can  feed undergraduates, the machine clearly dominates for larger numbers of  events.  We previously released a dataset with 3.5 million events; this one is  bigger, more accurate (since the software has been improved), and covers a  longer time period.   

 Most international relations data are limited to analyses aggregated to the  year or month.  Yet, as we say in the article, when the Palestinians launch a  mortar attack into Israel, the Israeli army does not wait until the end of the  calendar year to react.  We think there is much to be learned about  international relations from data like these.  For the data, documentation, and our article, see  this site . 

 Gary 

  *Gary King and Will Lowe. 2003. "An Automated Information Extraction Tool For International Conflict Data with Performance as Good as Human Coders: A Rare Events Evaluation Design"  International Organization , 57, 3 (July, 2003): Pp. 617-642.