推特用户分享纽约风暴官方响应信息的分析。

Medicine 2.0 Pub Date : 2014-03-20 eCollection Date: 2014-01-01 DOI:10.2196/med20.3237
Nicholas Genes, Michael Chary, Kevin Chason
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引用次数: 18

摘要

背景:Twitter是一个社交网络,用户可以在其中阅读、发送和分享文本片段(“tweets”)。推文可以通过多种方式传播;在台式电脑、笔记本电脑和移动设备上,通过以太网、Wi-Fi或蜂窝网络。这种冗余使Twitter成为在紧急情况或灾难期间向公众传播信息的有用工具。以前关于使用Twitter传播信息的研究主要是调查推文的特征,这些特征最有效地提高了消费者对新产品或事件的认识。特别是,它们描述了增加信息被用户分享(“转发”)机会的特征。相比之下,关于紧急情况下市政或州政府机构的信息如何在Twitter上传播的报道却很少。转发这些信息是提高公众对灾难中政府官员可能发出的重要指示的认识的一种方式。目的:本研究的目的是(1)描述公职人员围绕最近两次需要大规模应急响应的显著冬季风暴的选定纽约州和纽约市机构的推文,以及(2)确定传播(转发)最多的公职人员推文的特征。方法:在超级风暴“桑迪”(2012年10月)和冬季暴风雪“尼莫”(2013年2月)前后一周,我们收集了(1)来自纽约六个政府机构官方账号的推文,(2)所有包含# Sandy(或# Nemo)和#nyc标签的推文。从这些数据中,我们计算了一条推文被转发的次数,控制了每个账户中基线活动的差异。我们观察了每条推文包含多少标签和链接。我们还计算了每条推文的词汇多样性,这是对词汇使用范围的衡量。结果:在桑迪风暴期间,收集了3242条来自公职人员的共享(转发)信息。官方推文的词汇多样性相似(2.25-2.49),远低于提到#sandy和#nyc的非官方推文的平均水平(3.82)。大多数官方推文都有大量转发,包括进一步阅读的链接。在尼莫暴雪的6个官方城市和州推特账户中,分析了448条推文,其中271条与风暴有关,174条为公众提供了可操作的信息。可操作的风暴信息每条被转发约24次,而一般风暴信息每条被转发31次。结论:在两次天气紧急情况中,纽约公共官员能够传达与风暴有关的信息,这些信息在现有追随者基础之外得到广泛共享,从而有可能提高态势感知和灾难响应能力。与其他城市和桑迪相关的推文相比,桑迪官方推文的词汇多样性得分较低,可能更容易理解,而且往往与更多的信息和资源相连。尼莫暴风雪中可操作的信息,比如具体的指示和取消通知,并不像更一般的警告和“有趣的事实”那样经常被分享,这表明机构将重要的指示与更一般的新闻和琐事混合在一起,作为一种在灾难中接触到最广泛受众的方式。
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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Analysis of twitter users' sharing of official new york storm response messages.

Background: Twitter is a social network where users read, send, and share snippets of text ("tweets"). Tweets can be disseminated through multiple means; on desktop computers, laptops, and mobile devices, over ethernet, Wi-Fi or cellular networks. This redundancy positions Twitter as a useful tool for disseminating information to the public during emergencies or disasters. Previous research on dissemination of information using Twitter has mostly investigated the characteristics of tweets that are most effective in raising consumer awareness about a new product or event. In particular, they describe characteristics that increase the chance the messages will be shared ("retweeted") by users. In comparison, little has been published on how information from municipal or state government agencies spreads on Twitter during emergency situations. Retweeting these messages is a way to enhance public awareness of potentially important instructions from public officials in a disaster.

Objective: The aim of this study is to (1) describe the tweets of select New York State and New York City agencies by public officials surrounding two notable recent winter storms that required a large-scale emergency response, and (2) identify the characteristics of the tweets of public officials that were most disseminated (retweeted).

Methods: For one week surrounding Superstorm Sandy (October 2012) and the winter blizzard Nemo (February 2013), we collected (1) tweets from the official accounts for six New York governmental agencies, and (2) all tweets containing the hashtags #sandy (or #nemo) and #nyc. From these data we calculated how many times a tweet was retweeted, controlling for differences in baseline activity in each account. We observed how many hashtags and links each tweet contained. We also calculated the lexical diversity of each tweet, a measure of the range of vocabulary used.

Results: During the Sandy storm, 3242 shared (retweeted) messages from public officials were collected. The lexical diversity of official tweets was similar (2.25-2.49) and well below the average for non-official tweets mentioning #sandy and #nyc (3.82). Most official tweets were with substantial retweets including a link for further reading. Of the 448 tweets analyzed from six official city and state Twitter accounts from the Nemo blizzard, 271 were related to the storm, and 174 had actionable information for the public. Actionable storm messages were retweeted approximately 24x per message, compared to 31x per message for general storm information.

Conclusions: During two weather emergencies, New York public officials were able to convey storm-related information that was shared widely beyond existing follower bases, potentially improving situational awareness and disaster response. Official Sandy tweets, characterized by a lower lexical diversity score than other city- and Sandy-related tweets, were likely easier to understand, and often linked to further information and resources. Actionable information in the Nemo blizzard, such as specific instructions and cancellation notices, was not shared as often as more general warnings and "fun facts," suggesting agencies mix important instructions with more general news and trivia, as a way of reaching the broadest audience during a disaster.

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