SICYLGSOC-PHJun 15, 2021

COVID-19 Vaccine Misinformation Campaigns and Social Media Narratives

arXiv:2106.08423v235 citations
AI Analysis

This research addresses the problem of vaccine misinformation on social media for public health officials and policymakers, though it is incremental in applying existing network analysis methods to new COVID-19 data.

The study investigated misinformation communities and narratives contributing to COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy by analyzing Twitter data, identifying two suspicious groups promoting conspiracy theories like the 'Great Reset' and Bioweapon theory, and found that anti-vaccine and far-right communities had a much higher proportion of conspiracy and questionable sources compared to reliable sources.

COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy has increased concerns about vaccine uptake required to overcome the pandemic and protect public health. A critical factor associated with anti-vaccine attitudes is the information shared on social media. In this work, we investigate misinformation communities and narratives that can contribute to COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. During the pandemic, anti-science and political misinformation/conspiracies have been rampant on social media. Therefore, we investigate misinformation and conspiracy groups and their characteristic behaviours in Twitter data collected on COVID-19 vaccines. We identify if any suspicious coordinated efforts are present in promoting vaccine misinformation, and find two suspicious groups - one promoting a 'Great Reset' conspiracy which suggests that the pandemic is orchestrated by world leaders to take control of the economy, with vaccine related misinformation and strong anti-vaccine and anti-social messages such as no lock-downs; and another promoting the Bioweapon theory. Misinformation promoted is largely from the anti-vaccine and far-right communities in the 3-core of the retweet graph, with its tweets proportion of conspiracy and questionable sources to reliable sources being much higher. In comparison with the mainstream and health news, the right-leaning community is more influenced by the anti-vaccine and far-right communities, which is also reflected in the disparate vaccination rates in left and right U.S. states. The misinformation communities are also more vocal, either in vaccine or other discussions, relative to remaining communities, besides other behavioral differences.

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