Modelling the Degree of Emotional Concern: COVID-19 Response in Social Media

被引:3
|
作者
Ortega, Jose Moreno [1 ,2 ]
Bernabe-Moreno, Juan [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Granada, Dept Comp Sci & Artificial Intelligence, Granada 18010, Spain
[2] EON SE, D-45131 Essen, Germany
[3] Univ Oxford, Math Inst, Oxford OX2 6GG, England
来源
APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL | 2021年 / 11卷 / 09期
关键词
COVID-19; emotional profiling; Twitter; pleasure-arousal-dominance model; Russell Circumplex model; emotional concern; searching behavior; social media; CIRCUMPLEX MODEL; MENTAL-HEALTH; DOMINANCE; LOCATIONS; AROUSAL; IMPACT; NORMS;
D O I
10.3390/app11093872
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
The massive impact caused by the COVID-19 pandemic has left no one indifferent, becoming an unprecedented challenge. The use of protections such as sanitary masks has become increasingly common, restrictions in our daily lives, such as social distancing or confinements, have had serious consequences on the economy and our welfare state. Although the measures imposed throughout the world follow the same pattern, they have been applied with different criteria depending on the country. Over extended periods of time, people tend to change their perception of an event and its magnitude, or in other words, they stop being so concerned despite the seriousness of the matter. In this paper, we introduce a new metric to quantify the degree of emotional concern of people being affected by a topic, and we confirm how populations from different countries follow this trend of downplaying the effect of the pandemic and reach a state of indifference. To do this, we propose a method to analyze the social media stream over time extracting the different emotional states from the Russel Circumplex plane and computing the shifting created by the tragic event-the pandemic. We complete this metric by incorporating searching behavior to reflect not only push contents but also pull inquiries. The resulting metric establishes a relationship between the pandemic and the emotional response by defining the degree of Emotional Concern. Although the method can be applied to any location with a significant and varied amount of geo-localized social media streams, the scope of this paper covers the most representative cities in Europe.
引用
收藏
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] COVID-19 and social media: Beyond polarization
    De Nicola, Giacomo
    Mambou, Victor H. Tuekam
    Kauermann, Goeran
    PNAS NEXUS, 2023, 2 (08):
  • [22] COVID-19 Literacy through Social Media
    Esther Gonzalez-Moreno, Sonia
    JOURNAL OF LEARNING STYLES, 2020, 13 : 128 - 139
  • [23] Museums, COVID-19 and the pivot to social media
    Larkin, Jamie
    Ballatore, Andrea
    Mityurova, Ekaterina
    CURATOR-THE MUSEUM JOURNAL, 2023, 66 (04) : 629 - 646
  • [24] COVID-19 and library social media use
    Koulouris, Alexandros
    Vraimaki, Eftichia
    Koloniari, Maria
    REFERENCE SERVICES REVIEW, 2021, 49 (01) : 19 - 38
  • [25] Promoting COVID-19 Vaccination on Social Media
    Raza, Fajar
    Lantos, John D.
    PEDIATRICS, 2021, 147 (05)
  • [26] Social responsibility of medical journal: a concern for COVID-19 pandemic
    Hamid, Agus Rizal Ardy Hariandy
    MEDICAL JOURNAL OF INDONESIA, 2020, 29 (01) : 1 - 3
  • [27] Social media and the spread of COVID-19 infodemic
    Adekoya, Clement Ola
    Fasae, Joseph Kehinde
    GLOBAL KNOWLEDGE MEMORY AND COMMUNICATION, 2022, 71 (03) : 105 - 120
  • [28] Museums and Social Media During COVID-19
    McGrath, Jim
    PUBLIC HISTORIAN, 2020, 42 (04): : 164 - 172
  • [29] The Social Brain and Emotional Contagion: COVID-19 Effects
    Valenzano, Anna
    Scarinci, Alessia
    Monda, Vincenzo
    Sessa, Francesco
    Messina, Antonietta
    Monda, Marcellino
    Precenzano, Francesco
    Mollica, Maria Pina
    Carotenuto, Marco
    Messina, Giovanni
    Cibelli, Giuseppe
    MEDICINA-LITHUANIA, 2020, 56 (12): : 1 - 10
  • [30] The Use of Social Media to Deliver Surgical Education in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Yang, Shijie
    Jin, Chao
    Wang, Jinhui
    Xu, Xiequn
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE SURGERY, 2022, 35 (06) : 1350 - 1356