COVID-19信息大流行期间的信息紊乱:以意大利Facebook为例

Q1 Social Sciences Online Social Networks and Media Pub Date : 2021-03-01 DOI:10.1016/j.osnem.2021.100124
Stefano Guarino , Francesco Pierri , Marco Di Giovanni , Alessandro Celestini
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引用次数: 27

摘要

最近的COVID-19大流行伴随着“信息大流行”,在线社交媒体上充斥着往往不可靠的信息,这些信息将医疗紧急情况与流行的虚假信息主题联系在一起。意大利是首批新病例增加并面临全面封锁的欧洲国家之一,在网上,移民流动和5G技术等有争议的话题经常与病毒的起源和传播联系在一起。在这项工作中,我们分析了意大利Facebook上与COVID-19相关的对话,收集了自2020年1月以来四个月内近8万个公共页面和群组分享的150多万条帖子。一方面,我们的研究结果表明,众所周知的不可靠来源的曝光率有限,对有争议话题的讨论并没有引发机构和科学交流方面的可比参与。然而,另一方面,我们意识到,虚假信息和反信息导致了群组和页面的两极分化,其中对话的特点是主题词汇,用户生成内容的大量扩散,以及似乎归因于协调宣传的链接共享模式。url共享扩散网络显示出“小世界”效应,用户很容易接触到有害的宣传,也很容易接触到有关病毒的经过验证的信息,从而提升了公众人物和主流媒体以及Facebook群组在塑造舆论方面的作用。
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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Information disorders during the COVID-19 infodemic: The case of Italian Facebook

The recent COVID-19 pandemic came alongside with an “infodemic”, with online social media flooded by often unreliable information associating the medical emergency with popular subjects of disinformation. In Italy, one of the first European countries suffering a rise in new cases and dealing with a total lockdown, controversial topics such as migrant flows and the 5G technology were often associated online with the origin and diffusion of the virus. In this work we analyze COVID-19 related conversations on the Italian Facebook, collecting over 1.5M posts shared by nearly 80k public pages and groups for a period of four months since January 2020. On the one hand, our findings suggest that well-known unreliable sources had a limited exposure, and that discussions over controversial topics did not spark a comparable engagement with respect to institutional and scientific communication. On the other hand, however, we realize that dis- and counter-information induced a polarization of (clusters of) groups and pages, wherein conversations were characterized by a topical lexicon, by a great diffusion of user generated content, and by link-sharing patterns that seem ascribable to coordinated propaganda. As revealed by the URL-sharing diffusion network showing a “small-world” effect, users were easily exposed to harmful propaganda as well as to verified information on the virus, exalting the role of public figures and mainstream media, as well as of Facebook groups, in shaping the public opinion.

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来源期刊
Online Social Networks and Media
Online Social Networks and Media Social Sciences-Communication
CiteScore
10.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
审稿时长
44 days
期刊最新文献
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