CLOct 17, 2020Code
Drink Bleach or Do What Now? Covid-HeRA: A Study of Risk-Informed Health Decision Making in the Presence of COVID-19 MisinformationArkin Dharawat, Ismini Lourentzou, Alex Morales et al.
Given the widespread dissemination of inaccurate medical advice related to the 2019 coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19), such as fake remedies, treatments and prevention suggestions, misinformation detection has emerged as an open problem of high importance and interest for the research community. Several works study health misinformation detection, yet little attention has been given to the perceived severity of misinformation posts. In this work, we frame health misinformation as a risk assessment task. More specifically, we study the severity of each misinformation story and how readers perceive this severity, i.e., how harmful a message believed by the audience can be and what type of signals can be used to recognize potentially malicious fake news and detect refuted claims. To address our research questions, we introduce a new benchmark dataset, accompanied by detailed data analysis. We evaluate several traditional and state-of-the-art models and show there is a significant gap in performance when applying traditional misinformation classification models to this task. We conclude with open challenges and future directions.
IROct 15, 2019
Multi-dimensional Features for Prediction with TweetsNupoor Gandhi, Alex Morales, Dolores Albarracin
With the rise of opioid abuse in the US, there has been a growth of overlapping hotspots for overdose-related and HIV-related deaths in Springfield, Boston, Fall River, New Bedford, and parts of Cape Cod. With a large part of population, including rural communities, active on social media, it is crucial that we leverage the predictive power of social media as a preventive measure. We explore the predictive power of micro-blogging social media website Twitter with respect to HIV new diagnosis rates per county. While trending work in Twitter NLP has focused on primarily text-based features, we show that multi-dimensional feature construction can significantly improve the predictive power of topic features alone with respect STI's (sexually transmitted infections). By multi-dimensional features, we mean leveraging not only the topical features (text) of a corpus, but also location-based information (counties) about the tweets in feature-construction. We develop novel text-location-based smoothing features to predict new diagnoses of HIV.