Themes of anxiety, depression, and fear of shortages emerge as Rochester researchers continue to mine social media as a reflection of the United States 鈥渋n the moment.鈥
As the coronavirus pandemic began to disrupt life in the US, feelings of depression increased across the country鈥攖hough much less so in Florida.
Younger adults aged 18 to 35, females, and consumers in coastal states were more likely to ask people to stop hoarding.
And college students, overwhelmingly, were not happy about having to learn remotely.
Such snapshots of public attitudes during the opening phases of the COVID-19 pandemic were 鈥渕ined鈥 from Twitter messages by the computer science research group of . After an initial study on the use and implications of controversial terms like 鈥淐hinese virus鈥 and 鈥淲uhan virus,鈥 which was by the IEEE Transactions on Big Data and by , the flagship magazine and website of the IEEE, the group also:
- compared how from the general public to the pandemic
- as COVID-19 spread
- studied consumer hoarding behaviors resulting from the pandemic
Their findings were shared recently in a for chairs of computer science PhD-granting departments and heads of major industrial research labs at the in July.
鈥淲e hope these studies can raise awareness among researchers and the general public of how COVID-19 is influencing public opinion and impacting peoples鈥 mental health,鈥 says Luo, a professor of computer science. Nine current and former Rochester computer and data science students are among the coauthors of the studies.
During the past decade, people have increasingly relied on Twitter and other social media platforms to express their feelings. This has provided researchers with a wealth of 鈥渋n the moment鈥 information to detect shifts in public opinion on key social and political issues, to track the spread of disease, even to identify restaurants that might be sources of food poisoning.
Twitter, in particular, is a rich source of data because the millions of tweets posted by its members each day are easily accessible using an application programming interface.
However, Twitter also poses challenges to researchers because it strictly limits the number of words per tweet. Luo鈥檚 group describes how it has capitalized on recent advances in machine learning and data mining to overcome these challenges. The group created a process that 鈥渃ombines deep learning model scores with psychological textual features and users鈥 demographic information鈥 to detect signs of depression among Twitter users.
Here鈥檚 a closer look at the group鈥檚 recent findings about COVID-19 and Twitter:
Hoarding behavior
This is an example of how social media can be a 鈥渄ouble-edge sword,鈥 the researchers report. 鈥淲hile it is a rich source for obtaining useful information concerning the pandemic, it also shapes the fears. For instance, when posts of panic-buying of toilet paper and hand sanitizers proliferate on social media platforms, people might make panic purchases after they see such posts.鈥
The researchers analyzed the hoarding patterns of 43,102 Twitter users and found 鈥渟ignificantly higher鈥 anxiety associated with hoarding-related tweets. Concerns spiked in early March on the availability of toilet paper and in early March and end of March for medicines, then declined for both categories; concerns about the availability of food continued to rise through the end of April. The highest proportion of Twitter users engaged in hoarding were in urban areas.
College students
From a pool of Twitter users who follow official Twitter accounts of the 200 top-ranked US universities, the researchers obtained 73,787 COVID-19 tweets from 12,776 users, 3,460 of whom were college students.
The students tended to be more preoccupied with COVID-19 issues that affected them personally鈥攆or example, school closures鈥攁nd news from areas close to their homes. They tended to respond even more negatively than the general public to the spread of the pandemic and frequently expressed negative feelings about how social distancing and school closures were affecting their work and study environments. About 81.3 percent expressed dislike for remote learning. Many blamed East Asians for the disruptions in their lives.
Depression levels
The researchers created a dataset of 5,150 Twitter users, half of whom were identified as suffering from depression based on prepandemic tweets, the other half serving as a control group. 鈥淭his is by far the largest English Twitter depression dataset,鈥 the researchers say.
Depression levels are plotted for both groups starting with reports of the first confirmed US case on January 21, the declaration of a national emergency on March 13, and South Carolina鈥檚 stay-at-home order on April 7. Interestingly, feelings of depression increased in the control group, but decreased among depression sufferers after the report of the first US case. The depression levels of both groups increased after the national emergency was announced.
The researchers also looked at trends in three states: Florida, California, and New York. Twitter users in Florida were the most likely to talk about lifestyle changes caused by the pandemic, while New Yorkers were the most likely to talk about the impact on hospitals鈥攏o doubt reflecting the high number of cases in that state. Twitter users in California and Florida were more likely to comment on government policies on COVID-19. Florida鈥檚 lower overall depression rates than the two other states and the US in general鈥 both before and after the virus outbreak鈥攎ay be due to 鈥渁 lower depression rate overall鈥.鈥.鈥.鈥塱rrespective of the pandemic,鈥 the researchers report.
Now, COVID-19 is surging in Florida and other states that were still relatively unaffected when the studies were conducted. Mask wearing has become even more politicized, and educators at all levels are debating how best to resume classes this fall. And the outcome of this fall鈥檚 presidential election may hinge on still unforeseen twists and turns of COVID-19.
Luo says his team will continue to mine Twitter to help researchers and the public better understand the social impacts of this deadly and rapidly evolving pandemic.
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