4.3 Article

Social Bots' Involvement in the COVID-19 Vaccine Discussions on Twitter

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031651

Keywords

social bots; COVID-19 vaccine; social media analytics; twitter

Funding

  1. National Social Science Foundation Youth Project Research on the Influence of Social bots on the Climate of False Opinions in International Communication
  2. Major projects of Jiangsu Provincial Department of Education Research on the Influence of Social Bots on the Climate of False Opinions in International Communication and its Regulation [21CXW028, 2021SJZDA151]

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, social media played a crucial role in providing health information and facilitating discussions. This study investigated the extent of social bot involvement in COVID-19 vaccine-related discussions on Twitter and found that approximately 8.87% of users were bots. The study also analyzed the participation features of these bots.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, social media served as an important channel for the public to obtain health information and disseminate opinions when offline communication was severely hindered. Yet the emergence of social bots influencing social media conversations about public health threats will require researchers and practitioners to develop new communication strategies considering their influence. So far, little is known as to what extent social bots have been involved in COVID-19 vaccine-related discussions and debates on social media. This work selected a period of nearly 9 months after the approval of the first COVID-19 vaccines to detect social bots and performed high-frequency word analysis for both social bot-generated and human-generated tweets, thus working out the extent to which social bots participated in the discussion on the COVID-19 vaccine on Twitter and their participation features. Then, a textual analysis was performed on the content of tweets. The findings revealed that 8.87% of the users were social bots, with 11% of tweets in the corpus. Besides, social bots remained active over three periods. High-frequency words in the discussions of social bots and human users on vaccine topics were similar within the three peaks of discourse.

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