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Clusters of science and health related Twitter users become more isolated during the COVID-19 pandemic
- Source :
- Scientific Reports, Scientific Reports, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2021), Scientific Reports volume
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- COVID-19 represents the most severe global crisis to date whose public conversation can be studied in real time. To do so, we use a data set of over 350 million tweets and retweets posted by over 26 million English speaking Twitter users from January 13 to June 7, 2020. We characterize the retweet network to identify spontaneous clustering of users and the evolution of their interaction over time in relation to the pandemic's emergence. We identify several stable clusters (super-communities), and are able to link them to international groups mainly involved in science and health topics, national elites, and political actors. The science- and health-related super-community received disproportionate attention early on during the pandemic, and was leading the discussion at the time. However, as the pandemic unfolded, the attention shifted towards both national elites and political actors, paralleled by the introduction of country-specific containment measures and the growing politicization of the debate. Scientific super-community remained present in the discussion, but experienced less reach and became more isolated within the network. Overall, the emerging network communities are characterized by an increased self-amplification and polarization. This makes it generally harder for information from international health organizations or scientific authorities to directly reach a broad audience through Twitter for prolonged time. These results may have implications for information dissemination along the unfolding of long-term events like epidemic diseases on a world-wide scale.<br />Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX. Major changes after peer-review rebuttal
- Subjects :
- FOS: Computer and information sciences
scientific expert
J.4
Epidemiology
media_common.quotation_subject
Science
Twitter
Information Dissemination
Complex networks
Article
Social Networking
03 medical and health sciences
Politics
0302 clinical medicine
infodemic
complex network
Political science
Pandemic
Humans
Social media
Conversation
030212 general & internal medicine
Social network analysis
network analysis
Pandemics
030304 developmental biology
media_common
Social and Information Networks (cs.SI)
0303 health sciences
Multidisciplinary
business.industry
SARS-CoV-2
Polarization (politics)
International health
COVID-19
Computer Science - Social and Information Networks
Public relations
Social Isolation
Medicine
business
Social Media
Social Network Analysis
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20452322
- Volume :
- 11
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Scientific reports
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bf86bc0c4215239de3868fd019269240