Understanding the behaviour of online communities on social media platforms helps in controlling the accompanying adverse phenomena like false claims and conspiracy theories. Towards that aim, we present a multifaceted analysis of Twitter users and set a special focus on their 5G coronavirus tweets, in the light of the infamous 5G conspiracy theory. We contrast their idiosyncrasies with general coronavirus tweets in five million tweets acquired over a period of four months and a cadence of two weeks. We find that awareness raising and situation monitoring are two main concerns of Twitter online community. Additionally, 0.13% of the elicited tweets mention 5G, where a causal relationship between 5G and coronavirus besides China-related discussions are more evident compared to overall tweets. Indicators of other conspiracy theories appear more frequently in 5G coronavirus tweets as well.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 9474730
%A Trad, Rafi
%A Spiliopoulou, Myra
%B 2021 IEEE 34th International Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems (CBMS)
%D 2021
%K 5g coronavirus kmd myown twitter
%P 597-602
%R 10.1109/CBMS52027.2021.00107
%T Juxtaposing 5G Coronavirus Tweets with General Coronavirus Tweets During the Early Months of Coronavirus Outbreak
%U https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9474730
%X Understanding the behaviour of online communities on social media platforms helps in controlling the accompanying adverse phenomena like false claims and conspiracy theories. Towards that aim, we present a multifaceted analysis of Twitter users and set a special focus on their 5G coronavirus tweets, in the light of the infamous 5G conspiracy theory. We contrast their idiosyncrasies with general coronavirus tweets in five million tweets acquired over a period of four months and a cadence of two weeks. We find that awareness raising and situation monitoring are two main concerns of Twitter online community. Additionally, 0.13% of the elicited tweets mention 5G, where a causal relationship between 5G and coronavirus besides China-related discussions are more evident compared to overall tweets. Indicators of other conspiracy theories appear more frequently in 5G coronavirus tweets as well.
%@ 978-1-6654-3107-1
@inproceedings{9474730,
abstract = {Understanding the behaviour of online communities on social media platforms helps in controlling the accompanying adverse phenomena like false claims and conspiracy theories. Towards that aim, we present a multifaceted analysis of Twitter users and set a special focus on their 5G coronavirus tweets, in the light of the infamous 5G conspiracy theory. We contrast their idiosyncrasies with general coronavirus tweets in five million tweets acquired over a period of four months and a cadence of two weeks. We find that awareness raising and situation monitoring are two main concerns of Twitter online community. Additionally, 0.13% of the elicited tweets mention 5G, where a causal relationship between 5G and coronavirus besides China-related discussions are more evident compared to overall tweets. Indicators of other conspiracy theories appear more frequently in 5G coronavirus tweets as well.},
added-at = {2021-07-13T14:24:06.000+0200},
author = {Trad, Rafi and Spiliopoulou, Myra},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2193a526e43b1731c41291f9f739811d6/kmd-ovgu},
booktitle = {2021 IEEE 34th International Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems (CBMS)},
doi = {10.1109/CBMS52027.2021.00107},
interhash = {e66bb4d9600ab7a195c7775d5e3fc3af},
intrahash = {193a526e43b1731c41291f9f739811d6},
isbn = {978-1-6654-3107-1},
issn = {2372-918X},
keywords = {5g coronavirus kmd myown twitter},
language = {English},
pages = {597-602},
timestamp = {2021-07-13T14:25:39.000+0200},
title = {Juxtaposing 5G Coronavirus Tweets with General Coronavirus Tweets During the Early Months of Coronavirus Outbreak},
url = {https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9474730},
year = 2021
}