论文标题
社交媒体研究对潜在共同疫苗的公众意见:告知异议,差异和传播
Social Media Study of Public Opinions on Potential COVID-19 Vaccines: Informing Dissent, Disparities, and Dissemination
论文作者
论文摘要
SARS-COV-2疫苗的当前开发是前所未有的。然而,关于社交媒体上疫苗的细微差别,鲜为人知。我们采用人类引导的机器学习框架,使用近200万个独特的Twitter用户的超过600万条推文来捕获有关SARS-COV-2潜在疫苗的公众意见,将其分为三类:亲疫苗,疫苗,疫苗,疫苗,疫苗和抗Vaccine。我们在州和国家级别汇总了意见,发现不同意见群体百分比的主要变化与大流行有关的事件大致相对应。有趣的是,美国东南部的亲疫苗群体的百分比较低。使用多项式逻辑回归,我们比较人口统计学,社会资本,收入,宗教地位,政治隶属关系,地理位置,个人流行经验和非大流行经验的情感以及县级大流行的严重性感知这三个群体,以调查公众对疫苗的范围和原因。我们发现,在社会经济上处于弱势群体的群体更有可能对潜在的Covid-19疫苗发表两极分化的看法。拥有最糟糕的个人大流行经历的人更有可能持有反疫苗的意见。接下来,通过进行反事实分析,我们发现美国公众最关注有关Covid-19的潜在疫苗的安全性,有效性和政治问题,并改善个人流行经验会增加疫苗的接受水平。我们认为,这是第一个基于社交媒体的大规模研究,可以分析公众对潜在的Covid-19疫苗的看法,这些疫苗可以为更有效的疫苗分配政策和策略提供信息。
The current development of vaccines for SARS-CoV-2 is unprecedented. Little is known, however, about the nuanced public opinions on the vaccines on social media. We adopt a human-guided machine learning framework using more than six million tweets from almost two million unique Twitter users to capture public opinions on the potential vaccines for SARS-CoV-2, classifying them into three groups: pro-vaccine, vaccine-hesitant, and anti-vaccine. We aggregate opinions at the state and country levels, and find that the major changes in the percentages of different opinion groups roughly correspond to the major pandemic-related events. Interestingly, the percentage of the pro-vaccine group is lower in the Southeast part of the United States. Using multinomial logistic regression, we compare demographics, social capital, income, religious status, political affiliations, geo-locations, sentiment of personal pandemic experience and non-pandemic experience, and county-level pandemic severity perception of these three groups to investigate the scope and causes of public opinions on vaccines. We find that socioeconomically disadvantaged groups are more likely to hold polarized opinions on potential COVID-19 vaccines. People who have the worst personal pandemic experience are more likely to hold the anti-vaccine opinion. Next, by conducting counterfactual analyses, we find that the U.S. public is most concerned about the safety, effectiveness, and political issues regarding potential vaccines for COVID-19, and improving personal pandemic experience increases the vaccine acceptance level. We believe this is the first large-scale social media-based study to analyze public opinions on potential COVID-19 vaccines that can inform more effective vaccine distribution policies and strategies.