Abstract

BackgroundThe COVID-19 outbreak has left many people isolated within their homes; these people are turning to social media for news and social connection, which leaves them vulnerable to believing and sharing misinformation. Health-related misinformation threatens adherence to public health messaging, and monitoring its spread on social media is critical to understanding the evolution of ideas that have potentially negative public health impacts.ObjectiveThe aim of this study is to use Twitter data to explore methods to characterize and classify four COVID-19 conspiracy theories and to provide context for each of these conspiracy theories through the first 5 months of the pandemic.MethodsWe began with a corpus of COVID-19 tweets (approximately 120 million) spanning late January to early May 2020. We first filtered tweets using regular expressions (n=1.8 million) and used random forest classification models to identify tweets related to four conspiracy theories. Our classified data sets were then used in downstream sentiment analysis and dynamic topic modeling to characterize the linguistic features of COVID-19 conspiracy theories as they evolve over time.ResultsAnalysis using model-labeled data was beneficial for increasing the proportion of data matching misinformation indicators. Random forest classifier metrics varied across the four conspiracy theories considered (F1 scores between 0.347 and 0.857); this performance increased as the given conspiracy theory was more narrowly defined. We showed that misinformation tweets demonstrate more negative sentiment when compared to nonmisinformation tweets and that theories evolve over time, incorporating details from unrelated conspiracy theories as well as real-world events.ConclusionsAlthough we focus here on health-related misinformation, this combination of approaches is not specific to public health and is valuable for characterizing misinformation in general, which is an important first step in creating targeted messaging to counteract its spread. Initial messaging should aim to preempt generalized misinformation before it becomes widespread, while later messaging will need to target evolving conspiracy theories and the new facets of each as they become incorporated.

Highlights

  • BackgroundOn December 31, 2019, the World Health Organization (WHO) was made aware of a cluster of cases of viral pneumonia of unknown origin in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China [1]

  • The COVID-19 outbreak has left many people isolated within their homes, and these people are turning to social media for news and social connection

  • This study examines four oft-repeated and long-lived conspiracy theories surrounding COVID-19: 5G technology is somehow associated with the disease; Bill Gates or the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation created or patented the virus; the virus is human-made and was released from a laboratory; and a COVID-19 vaccine will be harmful

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundOn December 31, 2019, the World Health Organization (WHO) was made aware of a cluster of cases of viral pneumonia of unknown origin in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China [1]. On January 19, the WHO Western Pacific Regional Office tweeted evidence of human-to-human transmission, saying, “According to the latest information received and @WHO analysis, there is evidence of limited human-to-human transmission of #nCOV This is in line with experience with other respiratory illnesses and in particular with other coronavirus outbreaks [3].”. The original article received 1600 likes on its first day of publication; it was reposted verbatim but with the more provocative headline “Did China Steal Coronavirus From Canada And Weaponize It” on the website ZeroHedge [5] This version was reposted by the website RedStateWatcher.com, one of the 140 most popular sites in the United States, with more than 4 million followers on Facebook; from there, the story quickly went viral [6]. Initial messaging should aim to preempt generalized misinformation before it becomes widespread, while later messaging will need to target evolving conspiracy theories and the new facets of each as they become incorporated

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