COVID-19疫苗传播中的科学政治化:比较美国政治家、医学专家和政府机构

IF 4.6 1区 社会学 Q1 COMMUNICATION Political Communication Pub Date : 2023-04-10 DOI:10.1080/10584609.2023.2201184
Alvin Zhou, Wenlin Liu, A. Yang
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引用次数: 4

摘要

我们比较了由美国政治家、医学专家和政府机构构建的关于COVID-19疫苗的社交媒体话语,并调查了各种背景因素如何影响政府机构将该问题政治化的可能性。本文以政治语料库和医学语料库为极端,提出了基于语言的科学政治化定义,并对其进行了连续尺度的测量。通过建立一个机器学习分类器,捕捉微妙的政治化语言指标,并将其应用于政府机构两年的Facebook帖子历史,我们证明:1)美国政客将COVID-19疫苗严重政治化,医学专家传达的政治化程度最低,政府机构的话语是两者的混合;2)增加的COVID-19感染率降低了政府机构的政治化倾向;3)倾向民主党的州的政府机构比倾向共和党的州的政府机构更有可能将COVID-19疫苗政治化;4)不同机构管辖级别的政治化程度没有显著差异。我们讨论了科学政治化的概念、在位效应和政府传播作为政治传播研究的新兴领域。《政治传播》版权归劳特利奇所有,未经版权所有者明确书面许可,其内容不得复制或通过电子邮件发送到多个网站或发布到listserv。但是,用户可以打印、下载或通过电子邮件发送文章供个人使用。这可以删节。对副本的准确性不作任何保证。用户应参阅原始出版版本的材料的完整。(版权适用于所有人。)
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Politicization of Science in COVID-19 Vaccine Communication: Comparing US Politicians, Medical Experts, and Government Agencies
We compare the social media discourses on COVID-19 vaccines constructed by U.S. politicians, medical experts, and government agencies, and investigate how various contextual factors influence the likelihood of government agencies politicizing the issue. Taking the political corpus and the medical corpus as two extremes, we propose a language-based definition of politicization of science and measure it on a continuous scale. By building a machine learning classifier that captures subtle linguistic indicators of politicization and applying it to two years of government agencies' Facebook posting history, we demonstrate that: 1) U.S. politicians heavily politicized COVID-19 vaccines, medical experts conveyed minimal politicization, and government agencies' discourse was a mix of the two, yet more closely resembled medical experts;' 2) increasing COVID-19 infection rates reduced government agencies' politicization tendencies;3) government agencies in Democratic-leaning states were more likely to politicize COVID-19 vaccines than those in Republican-leaning states;and 4) the degree of politicization did not significantly differ across agencies' jurisdiction levels. We discuss the conceptualization of politicization of science, the incumbency effect, and government communication as an emerging area for political communication research. [ FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of Political Communication is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full . (Copyright applies to all s.)
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.90
自引率
2.70%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: Political Communication is a quarterly international journal showcasing state-of-the-art, theory-driven empirical research at the nexus of politics and communication. Its broad scope addresses swiftly evolving dynamics and urgent policy considerations globally. The journal embraces diverse research methodologies and analytical perspectives aimed at advancing comprehension of political communication practices, processes, content, effects, and policy implications. Regular symposium issues delve deeply into key thematic areas.
期刊最新文献
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