Department of Medical Communication, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku Yoshida-konoe-cho, Kyoto, Japan.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Sep 9;24(1):2447. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-19813-y.
The COVID-19 pandemic has spurred the growth of a global infodemic. In order to combat the COVID-19 infodemic, it is necessary to understand what kinds of misinformation are spreading. Furthermore, various local factors influence how the infodemic manifests in different countries. Therefore, understanding how and why infodemics differ between countries is a matter of interest for public health. This study aims to elucidate and compare the types of COVID-19 misinformation produced from the infodemic in the US and Japan.
COVID-19 fact-checking articles were obtained from the two largest publishers of fact-checking articles in each language. 1,743 US articles and 148 Japanese articles in their respective languages were gathered, with articles published between 23 January 2020 and 4 November 2022. Articles were analyzed using the free text mining software KH Coder. Exploration of frequently-occurring words and groups of related words was carried out. Based on agglomeration plots and prior research, eight categories of misinformation were created. Lastly, coding rules were created for these eight categories, and a chi-squared test was performed to compare the two datasets.
Overall, the most frequent words in both languages were related to health-related terms, but the Japan dataset had more words referring to foreign countries. Among the eight categories, differences with chi-squared p ≤ 0.01 were found after Holm-Bonferroni p value adjustment for the proportions of misinformation regarding statistics (US 40.0% vs. JP 25.7%, ϕ 0.0792); origin of the virus and resultant discrimination (US 7.0% vs. JP 20.3%, ϕ 0.1311); and COVID-19 disease severity, treatment, or testing (US 32.6% vs. JP 45.9%, ϕ 0.0756).
Local contextual factors were found that likely influenced the infodemic in both countries; representations of these factors include societal polarization in the US and the HPV vaccine scare in Japan. It is possible that Japan's relative resistance to misinformation affects the kinds of misinformation consumed, directing attention away from conspiracy theories and towards health-related issues. However, more studies need to be done to verify whether misinformation resistance affects misinformation consumption patterns this way.
COVID-19 大流行引发了全球信息疫情。为了应对 COVID-19 信息疫情,有必要了解哪些是正在传播的错误信息。此外,各种地方因素影响着信息疫情在不同国家的表现。因此,了解信息疫情在国家之间的差异以及原因是公共卫生的关注重点。本研究旨在阐明和比较美国和日本信息疫情中产生的 COVID-19 错误信息的类型。
从两种语言中最大的两家事实核查文章出版商处获取 COVID-19 事实核查文章。共收集了 2020 年 1 月 23 日至 2022 年 11 月 4 日期间以各自语言发布的 1743 篇美国文章和 148 篇日本文章。使用免费的文本挖掘软件 KH Coder 对文章进行分析。进行了频繁出现的单词和相关单词组的探索。基于凝聚图和先前的研究,创建了 8 类错误信息。最后,为这 8 类错误信息创建了编码规则,并对两个数据集进行了卡方检验。
总的来说,两种语言中最常见的单词都与健康相关术语有关,但日本数据集有更多与外国有关的单词。在这 8 类错误信息中,在进行 Holm-Bonferroni 调整 p 值后,发现两组数据在关于统计数据的错误信息比例(美国 40.0%对日本 25.7%,φ0.0792)、病毒来源和由此产生的歧视(美国 7.0%对日本 20.3%,φ0.1311)和 COVID-19 疾病严重程度、治疗或检测(美国 32.6%对日本 45.9%,φ0.0756)方面存在差异,p 值均≤0.01。
发现了可能影响两国信息疫情的地方因素;这些因素的表现包括美国的社会两极化和日本的 HPV 疫苗恐慌。日本对错误信息的相对抵制可能会影响错误信息的消费类型,将注意力从阴谋论转移到健康问题上。然而,需要进一步研究以验证错误信息抵制是否以这种方式影响错误信息的消费模式。