Mishler, AlanWonus, KevinChambers, WendyBloodgood, MichaelSince the events of the Arab Spring, there has been increased interest in using social media to anticipate social unrest. While efforts have been made toward automated unrest prediction, we focus on filtering the vast volume of tweets to identify tweets relevant to unrest, which can be provided to downstream users for further analysis. We train a supervised classifier that is able to label Arabic language tweets as relevant to unrest with high reliability. We examine the relationship between training data size and performance and investigate ways to optimize the model building process while minimizing cost. We also explore how confidence thresholds can be set to achieve desired levels of performance.en-UScomputer sciencestatistical methodsartificial intelligencemachine learningcomputational linguisticsnatural language processinghuman language technologytext processingactive learningselective samplingstopping criteriastopping methodstext classificationtext filteringsocial mediasocial unrestFiltering Tweets for Social UnrestArticle