Psychological, political, cultural, and even societal factors are entangled in the reasoning and decision-making process towards vaccination, rendering vaccine hesitancy a complex issue. Here, administering a series of surveys via a Facebook-hosted application, we study the worldviews of people that �Liked� supportive or vaccine resilient Facebook Pages. In particular, we assess differences in political viewpoints, moral values, personality traits, and general interests, finding that those sceptical about vaccination, appear to trust less the government, are less agreeable, while they are emphasising more on anti-authoritarian values. Exploring the differences in moral narratives as expressed in the linguistic descriptions of the Facebook Pages, we see that pages that defend vaccines prioritise the value of the family while the vaccine hesitancy pages are focusing on the value of freedom. Finally, creating embeddings based on the health-related likes on Facebook Pages, we explore common, latent interests of vaccine-hesitant people, showing a strong preference for natural cures. This exploratory analysis aims at exploring the potentials of a social media platform to act as a sensing tool, providing researchers and policymakers with insights drawn from the digital traces, that can help design communication campaigns that build confidence, based on the values that also appeal to the socio-moral criteria of people.

Kalimeri, K., Bonanomi, A., Beiro, M. G., Rosina, A., Urbinati, A., Cattuto, C., Human values and attitudes towards vaccination in social media, Selected paper, in The Web Conference 2019 - Companion of the World Wide Web Conference, WWW 2019, (San Francisco, USA, 13-17 May 2019), Association for Computing Machinery, Inc, 1515 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY 10036-9998 USA 2019: 248-254. 10.1145/3308560.3316489 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/141933]

Human values and attitudes towards vaccination in social media

Bonanomi, Andrea;Rosina, Alessandro;
2019

Abstract

Psychological, political, cultural, and even societal factors are entangled in the reasoning and decision-making process towards vaccination, rendering vaccine hesitancy a complex issue. Here, administering a series of surveys via a Facebook-hosted application, we study the worldviews of people that �Liked� supportive or vaccine resilient Facebook Pages. In particular, we assess differences in political viewpoints, moral values, personality traits, and general interests, finding that those sceptical about vaccination, appear to trust less the government, are less agreeable, while they are emphasising more on anti-authoritarian values. Exploring the differences in moral narratives as expressed in the linguistic descriptions of the Facebook Pages, we see that pages that defend vaccines prioritise the value of the family while the vaccine hesitancy pages are focusing on the value of freedom. Finally, creating embeddings based on the health-related likes on Facebook Pages, we explore common, latent interests of vaccine-hesitant people, showing a strong preference for natural cures. This exploratory analysis aims at exploring the potentials of a social media platform to act as a sensing tool, providing researchers and policymakers with insights drawn from the digital traces, that can help design communication campaigns that build confidence, based on the values that also appeal to the socio-moral criteria of people.
2019
Inglese
The Web Conference 2019 - Companion of the World Wide Web Conference, WWW 2019
2019 World Wide Web Conference, WWW 2019
San Francisco, USA
Selected paper
13-mag-2019
17-mag-2019
978-145036675-5
Association for Computing Machinery, Inc
Kalimeri, K., Bonanomi, A., Beiro, M. G., Rosina, A., Urbinati, A., Cattuto, C., Human values and attitudes towards vaccination in social media, Selected paper, in The Web Conference 2019 - Companion of the World Wide Web Conference, WWW 2019, (San Francisco, USA, 13-17 May 2019), Association for Computing Machinery, Inc, 1515 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY 10036-9998 USA 2019: 248-254. 10.1145/3308560.3316489 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/141933]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/141933
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