Global Misinformation Spillovers in the Vaccination Debate Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Multilingual Twitter Study
Original Paper
Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics
Twitter
Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Ciències de la salut::Aspectes socials
R858-859.7
COVID-19 vaccines
COVID-19
Vaccination hesitancy
COVID-19 (Malaltia)
Social networks
3. Good health
COVID-19; Twitter; misinformation; social media; vaccination hesitancy; vaccine
Social media
Xarxes socials
COVID-19 (Disease)
COVID-19 (Disease) in mass media
Misinformation
Desinformació
Vaccine hesitancy
Vaccine
COVID-19 (Malaltia) en els mitjans de comunicació de massa
DOI:
10.2196/44714
Publication Date:
2023-05-24T13:45:28Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Background
Antivaccination views pervade online social media, fueling distrust in scientific expertise and increasing the number of vaccine-hesitant individuals. Although previous studies focused on specific countries, the COVID-19 pandemic has brought the vaccination discourse worldwide, underpinning the need to tackle low-credible information flows on a global scale to design effective countermeasures.
Objective
This study aimed to quantify cross-border misinformation flows among users exposed to antivaccination (no-vax) content and the effects of content moderation on vaccine-related misinformation.
Methods
We collected 316 million vaccine-related Twitter (Twitter, Inc) messages in 18 languages from October 2019 to March 2021. We geolocated users in 28 different countries and reconstructed a retweet network and cosharing network for each country. We identified communities of users exposed to no-vax content by detecting communities in the retweet network via hierarchical clustering and manual annotation. We collected a list of low-credibility domains and quantified the interactions and misinformation flows among no-vax communities of different countries.
Results
The findings showed that during the pandemic, no-vax communities became more central in the country-specific debates and their cross-border connections strengthened, revealing a global Twitter antivaccination network. US users are central in this network, whereas Russian users also became net exporters of misinformation during vaccination rollout. Interestingly, we found that Twitter’s content moderation efforts, in particular the suspension of users following the January 6 US Capitol attack, had a worldwide impact in reducing the spread of misinformation about vaccines.
Conclusions
These findings may help public health institutions and social media platforms mitigate the spread of health-related, low-credibility information by revealing vulnerable web-based communities.
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