Dipartimento di Elettronica, Informazione e Bioingegneria, Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy.
Observatory on Social Media, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2023 Feb 24;25:e42227. doi: 10.2196/42227.
Vaccinations play a critical role in mitigating the impact of COVID-19 and other diseases. Past research has linked misinformation to increased hesitancy and lower vaccination rates. Gaps remain in our knowledge about the main drivers of vaccine misinformation on social media and effective ways to intervene.
Our longitudinal study had two primary objectives: (1) to investigate the patterns of prevalence and contagion of COVID-19 vaccine misinformation on Twitter in 2021, and (2) to identify the main spreaders of vaccine misinformation. Given our initial results, we further considered the likely drivers of misinformation and its spread, providing insights for potential interventions.
We collected almost 300 million English-language tweets related to COVID-19 vaccines using a list of over 80 relevant keywords over a period of 12 months. We then extracted and labeled news articles at the source level based on third-party lists of low-credibility and mainstream news sources, and measured the prevalence of different kinds of information. We also considered suspicious YouTube videos shared on Twitter. We focused our analysis of vaccine misinformation spreaders on verified and automated Twitter accounts.
Our findings showed a relatively low prevalence of low-credibility information compared to the entirety of mainstream news. However, the most popular low-credibility sources had reshare volumes comparable to those of many mainstream sources, and had larger volumes than those of authoritative sources such as the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization. Throughout the year, we observed an increasing trend in the prevalence of low-credibility news about vaccines. We also observed a considerable amount of suspicious YouTube videos shared on Twitter. Tweets by a small group of approximately 800 "superspreaders" verified by Twitter accounted for approximately 35% of all reshares of misinformation on an average day, with the top superspreader (@RobertKennedyJr) responsible for over 13% of retweets. Finally, low-credibility news and suspicious YouTube videos were more likely to be shared by automated accounts.
The wide spread of misinformation around COVID-19 vaccines on Twitter during 2021 shows that there was an audience for this type of content. Our findings are also consistent with the hypothesis that superspreaders are driven by financial incentives that allow them to profit from health misinformation. Despite high-profile cases of deplatformed misinformation superspreaders, our results show that in 2021, a few individuals still played an outsized role in the spread of low-credibility vaccine content. As a result, social media moderation efforts would be better served by focusing on reducing the online visibility of repeat spreaders of harmful content, especially during public health crises.
疫苗在减轻 COVID-19 和其他疾病的影响方面发挥着关键作用。过去的研究表明,错误信息与更高的犹豫和更低的疫苗接种率有关。我们对社交媒体上疫苗错误信息的主要驱动因素以及有效干预措施仍存在知识差距。
我们的纵向研究有两个主要目标:(1)调查 2021 年 Twitter 上 COVID-19 疫苗错误信息的流行和传播模式,(2)确定疫苗错误信息的主要传播者。鉴于我们的初步结果,我们进一步考虑了错误信息及其传播的可能驱动因素,为潜在干预措施提供了见解。
我们使用了 80 多个相关关键字的列表,在 12 个月的时间内收集了近 3 亿条与 COVID-19 疫苗相关的英语推文。然后,我们根据低可信度和主流新闻来源的第三方列表,在来源级别提取和标记新闻文章,并衡量了不同类型信息的流行程度。我们还考虑了在 Twitter 上分享的可疑 YouTube 视频。我们将疫苗错误信息传播者的分析重点放在经过验证的自动化 Twitter 账户上。
我们的研究结果表明,与主流新闻相比,低可信度信息的流行率相对较低。然而,最受欢迎的低可信度来源的转发量与许多主流来源相当,并且比美国疾病控制与预防中心和世界卫生组织等权威来源的转发量更大。在这一年中,我们观察到疫苗低可信度新闻的流行趋势不断增加。我们还观察到在 Twitter 上分享了相当数量的可疑 YouTube 视频。Twitter 验证的约 800 名“超级传播者”的少量推文平均每天占错误信息转发量的 35%左右,排名第一的超级传播者(@RobertKennedyJr)的转发量超过 13%。最后,低可信度新闻和可疑 YouTube 视频更有可能由自动化账户分享。
2021 年,Twitter 上围绕 COVID-19 疫苗的错误信息广泛传播,这表明存在对此类内容感兴趣的受众。我们的研究结果也与以下假设一致,即超级传播者是由金融激励驱动的,使他们能够从健康错误信息中获利。尽管有大量被删除的错误信息超级传播者案例,但我们的研究结果表明,2021 年,少数人仍然在低可信度疫苗内容的传播中扮演着重要角色。因此,社交媒体的监管工作最好集中在减少有害内容的重复传播者的在线可见度上,尤其是在公共卫生危机期间。