Abstract

During the COVID-19 pandemic, when individuals were confronted with social distancing, social media served as a significant platform for expressing feelings and seeking emotional support. However, a group of automated actors known as social bots have been found to coexist with human users in discussions regarding the coronavirus crisis, which may pose threats to public health. To figure out how these actors distorted public opinion and sentiment expressions in the outbreak, this study selected three critical timepoints in the development of the pandemic and conducted a topic-based sentiment analysis for bot-generated and human-generated tweets. The findings show that suspected social bots contributed to as much as 9.27% of COVID-19 discussions on Twitter. Social bots and humans shared a similar trend on sentiment polarity—positive or negative—for almost all topics. For the most negative topics, social bots were even more negative than humans. Their sentiment expressions were weaker than those of humans for most topics, except for COVID-19 in the US and the healthcare system. In most cases, social bots were more likely to actively amplify humans’ emotions, rather than to trigger humans’ amplification. In discussions of COVID-19 in the US, social bots managed to trigger bot-to-human anger transmission. Although these automated accounts expressed more sadness towards health risks, they failed to pass sadness to humans.

Highlights

  • Social media is an emerging platform for the public to find information, share opinions, and seek coping strategies when faced with health emergencies [1,2,3]

  • This study aims to address the following questions: RQ1 When discussing different topics concerning the COVID-19 pandemic, what are the differences between social bots and human users in terms of their (a) sentiment polarity and (b) sentiment strength?

  • We identified the key concerns and sentiment expressions of different actors on Twitter, through which we confirmed that social bots were intentionally engaged in manipulating public opinion and sentiments during the COVID-19 crisis and that they managed to facilitate the contagion of negative emotions on certain topics

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Summary

Introduction

Social media is an emerging platform for the public to find information, share opinions, and seek coping strategies when faced with health emergencies [1,2,3]. Sentiments and emotions from social media data are regarded as useful mental health indicators [4]. Strong emotions, such as anxiety, fear, and stress about the disease, might be triggered by updates on infection and mortality and be shared on social media [5]. Health information, telemedicine, and online psychological counseling on social media can help relieve individuals’ mental pressure. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 8701; doi:10.3390/ijerph17228701 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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