Hagen Loni, Fox Ashley, O'Leary Heather, Dyson DeAndre, Walker Kimberly, Lengacher Cecile A, Hernandez Raquel
School of Information University of South Florida Tampa, FL United States.
Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy University at Albany State University of New York Albany, NY United States.
JMIR Infodemiology. 2022 Jun 30;2(1):e34231. doi: 10.2196/34231. eCollection 2022 Jan-Jun.
Since COVID-19 vaccines became broadly available to the adult population, sharp divergences in uptake have emerged along partisan lines. Researchers have indicated a polarized social media presence contributing to the spread of mis- or disinformation as being responsible for these growing partisan gaps in uptake.
The major aim of this study was to investigate the role of influential actors in the context of the community structures and discourse related to COVID-19 vaccine conversations on Twitter that emerged prior to the vaccine rollout to the general population and discuss implications for vaccine promotion and policy.
We collected tweets on COVID-19 between July 1, 2020, and July 31, 2020, a time when attitudes toward the vaccines were forming but before the vaccines were widely available to the public. Using network analysis, we identified different naturally emerging Twitter communities based on their internal information sharing. A PageRank algorithm was used to quantitively measure the level of "influentialness" of Twitter accounts and identifying the "influencers," followed by coding them into different actor categories. Inductive coding was conducted to describe discourses shared in each of the 7 communities.
Twitter vaccine conversations were highly polarized, with different actors occupying separate "clusters." The antivaccine cluster was the most densely connected group. Among the 100 most influential actors, medical experts were outnumbered both by partisan actors and by activist vaccine skeptics or conspiracy theorists. Scientists and medical actors were largely absent from the conservative network, and antivaccine sentiment was especially salient among actors on the political right. Conversations related to COVID-19 vaccines were highly polarized along partisan lines, with "trust" in vaccines being manipulated to the political advantage of partisan actors.
These findings are informative for designing improved vaccine information communication strategies to be delivered on social media especially by incorporating influential actors. Although polarization and echo chamber effect are not new in political conversations in social media, it was concerning to observe these in health conversations on COVID-19 vaccines during the vaccine development process.
自从新冠疫苗面向成年人群体广泛供应以来,疫苗接种率在党派路线上出现了明显分歧。研究人员指出,社交媒体上两极分化的存在导致错误或虚假信息的传播,这是疫苗接种方面党派差距不断扩大的原因。
本研究的主要目的是调查有影响力的行为者在新冠疫苗向普通人群推出之前推特上与新冠疫苗相关对话的社区结构和话语背景中的作用,并讨论对疫苗推广和政策的影响。
我们收集了2020年7月1日至2020年7月31日期间关于新冠的推文,这段时间人们对疫苗的态度正在形成,但疫苗尚未广泛向公众提供。我们使用网络分析,根据其内部信息共享确定了不同的自然形成的推特社区。使用PageRank算法定量衡量推特账户的“影响力”水平并识别“有影响力的人”,然后将他们编码为不同的行为者类别。进行归纳编码以描述7个社区中每个社区共享的话语。
推特上关于疫苗的对话高度两极分化,不同的行为者占据不同的“群体”。反疫苗群体是联系最紧密的群体。在最有影响力的100个行为者中,医学专家的数量少于党派行为者以及激进的疫苗怀疑论者或阴谋论者。科学家和医学行为者在保守网络中基本不存在,反疫苗情绪在政治右翼行为者中尤为突出。与新冠疫苗相关的对话在党派路线上高度两极分化,对疫苗的“信任”被操纵以利于党派行为者的政治利益。
这些发现为设计改进的疫苗信息传播策略提供了参考,特别是通过纳入有影响力的行为者在社交媒体上进行传播。虽然两极分化和回音室效应在社交媒体的政治对话中并不新鲜,但在疫苗研发过程中观察到这些现象在关于新冠疫苗的健康对话中出现还是令人担忧的。