• J. Med. Internet Res. · Jan 2021

    Comparative Study

    A Novel Machine Learning Framework for Comparison of Viral COVID-19-Related Sina Weibo and Twitter Posts: Workflow Development and Content Analysis.

    • Shi Chen, Lina Zhou, Yunya Song, Qian Xu, Ping Wang, Kanlun Wang, Yaorong Ge, and Daniel Janies.
    • Department of Public Health Sciences, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, United States.
    • J. Med. Internet Res. 2021 Jan 6; 23 (1): e24889.

    BackgroundSocial media plays a critical role in health communications, especially during global health emergencies such as the current COVID-19 pandemic. However, there is a lack of a universal analytical framework to extract, quantify, and compare content features in public discourse of emerging health issues on different social media platforms across a broad sociocultural spectrum.ObjectiveWe aimed to develop a novel and universal content feature extraction and analytical framework and contrast how content features differ with sociocultural background in discussions of the emerging COVID-19 global health crisis on major social media platforms.MethodsWe sampled the 1000 most shared viral Twitter and Sina Weibo posts regarding COVID-19, developed a comprehensive coding scheme to identify 77 potential features across six major categories (eg, clinical and epidemiological, countermeasures, politics and policy, responses), quantified feature values (0 or 1, indicating whether or not the content feature is mentioned in the post) in each viral post across social media platforms, and performed subsequent comparative analyses. Machine learning dimension reduction and clustering analysis were then applied to harness the power of social media data and provide more unbiased characterization of web-based health communications.ResultsThere were substantially different distributions, prevalence, and associations of content features in public discourse about the COVID-19 pandemic on the two social media platforms. Weibo users were more likely to focus on the disease itself and health aspects, while Twitter users engaged more about policy, politics, and other societal issues.ConclusionsWe extracted a rich set of content features from social media data to accurately characterize public discourse related to COVID-19 in different sociocultural backgrounds. In addition, this universal framework can be adopted to analyze social media discussions of other emerging health issues beyond the COVID-19 pandemic.©Shi Chen, Lina Zhou, Yunya Song, Qian Xu, Ping Wang, Kanlun Wang, Yaorong Ge, Daniel Janies. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 06.01.2021.

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