Abstract

BackgroundPublic interest in radiation rose after the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station accident was caused by an earthquake off the Pacific coast of Tohoku on March 11, 2011. Various reports on the accident and radiation were spread by the mass media, and people displayed their emotional reactions, which were thought to be related to information about the Fukushima accident, on Twitter, Facebook, and other social networking sites. Fears about radiation were spread as well, leading to harmful rumors about Fukushima and the refusal to test children for radiation. It is believed that identifying the process by which people emotionally responded to this information, and hence became gripped by an increased aversion to Fukushima, might be useful in risk communication when similar disasters and accidents occur in the future. There are few studies surveying how people feel about radiation in Fukushima and other regions in an unbiased form.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study is to identify how the feelings of local residents toward radiation changed according to Twitter.MethodsWe used approximately 19 million tweets in Japanese containing the words “radiation” (放射線), “radioactivity” (放射能), and “radioactive substances” (放射性物質) that were posted to Twitter over a 1-year period following the Fukushima nuclear accident. We used regional identifiers contained in tweets (ie, nouns, proper nouns, place names, postal codes, and telephone numbers) to categorize them according to their prefecture, and then analyzed the feelings toward those prefectures from the semantic orientation of the words contained in individual tweets (ie, positive impressions or negative impressions).ResultsTweets about radiation increased soon after the earthquake and then decreased, and feelings about radiation trended positively. We determined that, on average, tweets associating Fukushima Prefecture with radiation show more positive feelings than those about other prefectures, but have trended negatively over time. We also found that as other tweets have trended positively, only bots and retweets about Fukushima Prefecture have trended negatively.ConclusionsThe number of tweets about radiation has decreased overall, and feelings about radiation have trended positively. However, the fact that tweets about Fukushima Prefecture trended negatively, despite decreasing in percentage, suggests that negative feelings toward Fukushima Prefecture have become more extreme. We found that while the bots and retweets that were not about Fukushima Prefecture gradually trended toward positive feelings, the bots and retweets about Fukushima Prefecture trended toward negative feelings.

Highlights

  • OverviewAt 2:46 PM JST (Japan Standard Time) on March 11, 2011, a magnitude-9 earthquake occurred off the Pacific coast of Tohoku—the Great East Japan Earthquake

  • We found that while the bots and retweets that were not about Fukushima Prefecture gradually trended toward positive feelings, the bots and retweets about Fukushima Prefecture trended toward negative feelings

  • We believe that people have become gripped by increasingly negative feelings over time concerning Fukushima Prefecture as a disaster area associated with radiation, and this may have influenced behavior such as restrained consumption activities and an aversion to medical radiation

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Summary

Introduction

OverviewAt 2:46 PM JST (Japan Standard Time) on March 11, 2011, a magnitude-9 earthquake occurred off the Pacific coast of Tohoku—the Great East Japan Earthquake. Reactors 2 and 4 were damaged, releasing a large quantity of radioactive substances into the environment This accident was classified as Level 7 according to the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale [1], and its effects were evaluated and reported by international organizations [2,3,4]. They indicated that the accident had increased anxieties about radiation and had given rise to a social phenomenon described as inciting harmful rumors about the disaster area. Twitter was found to be the most-used form of social media in coping with the disaster over Facebook or Mixi, and it was shown to have an influence on attitudes toward the Fukushima nuclear accident [11]

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