社交媒体上分享COVID-19科学时情绪的不对称影响:观察性研究

IF 3.5 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES JMIR infodemiology Pub Date : 2022-07-01 DOI:10.2196/37331
Kai Luo, Yang Yang, Hock Hai Teo
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:与以往的大流行不同,2019冠状病毒病的不同之处在于,同行评议和预印本研究出版物的数量都出现了前所未有的激增,有关它的重要科学对话在在线社交网络上猖獗,甚至在外行之间也是如此。显然,这种科学话语的新现象并没有得到很好的理解,因为我们不知道同行评审出版物与-à-vis预印本的传播模式,也不知道是什么让它们像病毒一样传播。目的:本文旨在研究关于预印本和同行评审出版物的信息的情绪如何影响其通过在线社交网络的传播,以便为卫生科学传播者和政策制定者就如何在社交媒体上促进重要流行病科学的可靠分享提供信息。方法:我们收集了Altmetric在预印服务器和同行评议期刊上追踪的关于2019冠状病毒病早期(2020年1月至5月)医学研究成果的大量Twitter讨论样本,并进行了统计分析,以检验情绪价、特定情绪以及科学家作为内容创作者在影响转发率方面的作用。结果:我们的大规模分析(n=243,567)显示,带有积极情绪的科学发表推文比带有消极情绪的推文传播得更快,尤其是关于预印本的消息。我们的研究结果还表明,科学家以内容创作者的身份参与社交媒体,可以强化对同行评审出版物分享的积极情绪影响。结论:在大流行的初期阶段,关键科学的清晰沟通至关重要。通过揭示社交媒体分享COVID-19科学成果中的情绪动态,我们的研究为科学家和政策制定者提供了一条途径,通过操纵推文的情绪来塑造新兴科学出版物的讨论和传播。科学家可以使用情感语言来促进更可靠的同行评议文章的传播,同时,如果他们认为向公众广泛传播预印本(非同行评议)数据为时过早,则避免在社交媒体上使用太多积极的情感语言。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The Asymmetric Influence of Emotion in the Sharing of COVID-19 Science on Social Media: Observational Study.

Background: Unlike past pandemics, COVID-19 is different to the extent that there is an unprecedented surge in both peer-reviewed and preprint research publications, and important scientific conversations about it are rampant on online social networks, even among laypeople. Clearly, this new phenomenon of scientific discourse is not well understood in that we do not know the diffusion patterns of peer-reviewed publications vis-à-vis preprints and what makes them viral.

Objective: This paper aimed to examine how the emotionality of messages about preprint and peer-reviewed publications shapes their diffusion through online social networks in order to inform health science communicators' and policy makers' decisions on how to promote reliable sharing of crucial pandemic science on social media.

Methods: We collected a large sample of Twitter discussions of early (January to May 2020) COVID-19 medical research outputs, which were tracked by Altmetric, in both preprint servers and peer-reviewed journals, and conducted statistical analyses to examine emotional valence, specific emotions, and the role of scientists as content creators in influencing the retweet rate.

Results: Our large-scale analyses (n=243,567) revealed that scientific publication tweets with positive emotions were transmitted faster than those with negative emotions, especially for messages about preprints. Our results also showed that scientists' participation in social media as content creators could accentuate the positive emotion effects on the sharing of peer-reviewed publications.

Conclusions: Clear communication of critical science is crucial in the nascent stage of a pandemic. By revealing the emotional dynamics in the social media sharing of COVID-19 scientific outputs, our study offers scientists and policy makers an avenue to shape the discussion and diffusion of emerging scientific publications through manipulation of the emotionality of tweets. Scientists could use emotional language to promote the diffusion of more reliable peer-reviewed articles, while avoiding using too much positive emotional language in social media messages about preprints if they think that it is too early to widely communicate the preprint (not peer reviewed) data to the public.

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