Global Misinformation Spillovers in the Vaccination Debate Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Multilingual Twitter Study.

IF 3.5 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES JMIR infodemiology Pub Date : 2023-05-24 DOI:10.2196/44714
Jacopo Lenti, Yelena Mejova, Kyriaki Kalimeri, André Panisson, Daniela Paolotti, Michele Tizzani, Michele Starnini
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Abstract

Background: Antivaccination views pervade online social media, fueling distrust in scientific expertise and increasing the number of vaccine-hesitant individuals. Although previous studies focused on specific countries, the COVID-19 pandemic has brought the vaccination discourse worldwide, underpinning the need to tackle low-credible information flows on a global scale to design effective countermeasures.

Objective: This study aimed to quantify cross-border misinformation flows among users exposed to antivaccination (no-vax) content and the effects of content moderation on vaccine-related misinformation.

Methods: We collected 316 million vaccine-related Twitter (Twitter, Inc) messages in 18 languages from October 2019 to March 2021. We geolocated users in 28 different countries and reconstructed a retweet network and cosharing network for each country. We identified communities of users exposed to no-vax content by detecting communities in the retweet network via hierarchical clustering and manual annotation. We collected a list of low-credibility domains and quantified the interactions and misinformation flows among no-vax communities of different countries.

Results: The findings showed that during the pandemic, no-vax communities became more central in the country-specific debates and their cross-border connections strengthened, revealing a global Twitter antivaccination network. US users are central in this network, whereas Russian users also became net exporters of misinformation during vaccination rollout. Interestingly, we found that Twitter's content moderation efforts, in particular the suspension of users following the January 6 US Capitol attack, had a worldwide impact in reducing the spread of misinformation about vaccines.

Conclusions: These findings may help public health institutions and social media platforms mitigate the spread of health-related, low-credibility information by revealing vulnerable web-based communities.

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COVID-19大流行之前和期间疫苗接种辩论中的全球错误信息溢出:多语言Twitter研究
背景:反对接种疫苗的观点在在线社交媒体上普遍存在,加剧了对科学专业知识的不信任,并增加了对接种疫苗犹豫不决的人的数量。尽管以前的研究侧重于特定国家,但2019冠状病毒病大流行使疫苗接种话语在全球范围内传播,因此需要在全球范围内解决低可信度信息流问题,以设计有效的对策。目的:本研究旨在量化暴露于反疫苗(无vax)内容的用户之间的跨境错误信息流动,以及内容审核对疫苗相关错误信息的影响。方法:从2019年10月至2021年3月,我们收集了18种语言的3.16亿条与疫苗相关的Twitter (Twitter, Inc)消息。我们对28个不同国家的用户进行了地理定位,并为每个国家重建了一个转发网络和共享网络。我们通过分层聚类和手动注释来检测转发网络中的社区,从而确定暴露于无vax内容的用户社区。我们收集了一个低可信度域的列表,并量化了不同国家的无税社区之间的相互作用和错误信息流。结果:调查结果显示,在大流行期间,不接种疫苗的社区在具体国家的辩论中变得更加重要,他们的跨境联系得到加强,揭示了一个全球Twitter反疫苗网络。美国用户是这个网络的中心,而俄罗斯用户在疫苗接种期间也成为错误信息的净出口国。有趣的是,我们发现Twitter的内容审核工作,特别是在1月6日美国国会遇袭后暂停用户,对减少有关疫苗的错误信息的传播产生了全球影响。结论:这些发现可能有助于公共卫生机构和社交媒体平台通过揭示脆弱的网络社区来减轻与健康相关的低可信度信息的传播。
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