Twitter and Middle East respiratory syndrome, South Korea, 2015: A multi-lingual study

Isaac Chun Hai Fung, Jing Zeng, Chung Hong Chan, Hai Liang, Jingjing Yin, Zhaochong Liu, Zion Tsz Ho Tse, King Wa Fu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Different linguo-cultural communities might react to an outbreak differently. The 2015 South Korean MERS outbreak presented an opportunity for us to compare tweets responding to the same outbreak in different languages. Methods: We obtained a 1% sample through Twitter streaming application programming interface from June 1 to 30, 2015. We identified MERS-related tweets with keywords such as ‘MERS’ and its translation in five different languages. We translated non-English tweets into English for statistical comparison. Results: We retrieved MERS-related Twitter data in five languages: Korean (N = 21,823), English (N = 4024), Thai (N = 2084), Japanese (N = 1334) and Indonesian (N = 1256). Categories of randomly selected user profiles (p < 0.001) and the top 30 sources of retweets (p < 0.001) differed between the five language corpora. Among the randomly selected user profiles, K-pop fans ranged from 4% in the Korean corpus to 70% in the Thai corpus; media ranged from 0% (Thai) to 14% (Indonesian); political advocates ranged from 0% (Thai) to 19% (Japanese); medical professionals ranged from 0% (Thai) to 7% (English). Among the top 30 sources of retweets for each corpus (150 in total), 70 (46.7%) were media; 29 (19.3%) were K-pop fans; 7 (4.7%) were political; 9 (6%) were medical; and 35 (23.3%) were categorized as ‘Others’. We performed chi-square feature selection and identified the top 20 keywords that were most unique to each corpus. Conclusion: Different linguo-cultural communities exist on Twitter and they might react to the same outbreak differently. Understanding audiences' unique Twitter cultures will allow public health agencies to develop appropriate Twitter health communication strategies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)10-16
Number of pages7
JournalInfection, Disease and Health
Volume23
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2018

Scopus Subject Areas

  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Nursing (miscellaneous)

Keywords

  • Culture
  • Health communication
  • Language
  • MERS
  • Social media

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Twitter and Middle East respiratory syndrome, South Korea, 2015: A multi-lingual study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this