论文标题
在危机期间,美国城市整个城市的在线地理定位情绪:普遍性,政策响应以及与当地流动性的联系
Online geolocalized emotion across US cities during the COVID crisis: Universality, policy response, and connection with local mobility
论文作者
论文摘要
当Covid-19的大流行开始跨越美国时,它引起了整个人群的各种反应,包括在线和离线。为了帮助在这种动荡中开发有效的空间靶向干预措施,重要的是要了解这些在线情感反应的地理定位以及它们与离线行为反应的关联。在这里,我们从大流行的头几个月开始分析美国49个城市中约1300万个地理标签的推文,以评估有关一些主要主题的在线情感中的区域依赖,以及这些情绪与政策发展和人类流动性的相关性。令人惊讶的是,我们观察到研究期间整个城市的总体和基于主题的情感的普遍趋势,主要仅在联邦准则和当地锁定政策的直接影响下才能看到可变性。我们还发现,这些地方情绪与城市级别的流动性高度相关并预测,而情感与当地案件和死亡之间的相关性相对较弱。我们的发现表明,与早期的当地围栏政策中看到的高可变性相反,在线公众对整个美国的共同反应(无论是时间还是相对于离线指标)。这项研究还通过整合离线数据,以深入了解公众情感反应,政策发展和本地流动性,从而为在危机管理中使用社交媒体数据的使用提供了新的见解。
As the COVID-19 pandemic began to sweep across the US it elicited a wide spectrum of responses, both online and offline, across the population. To aid the development of effective spatially targeted interventions in the midst of this turmoil, it is important to understand the geolocalization of these online emotional responses, as well as their association with offline behavioral responses. Here, we analyze around 13 million geotagged tweets in 49 cities across the US from the first few months of the pandemic to assess regional dependence in online sentiments with respect to a few major topics, and how these sentiments correlate with policy development and human mobility. Surprisingly, we observe universal trends in overall and topic-based sentiments across cities over the time period studied, with variability primarily seen only in the immediate impact of federal guidelines and local lockdown policies. We also find that these local sentiments are highly correlated with and predictive of city-level mobility, while the correlations between sentiments and local cases and deaths are relatively weak. Our findings point to widespread commonalities in the online public emotional responses to COVID across the US, both temporally and relative to offline indicators, in contrast with the high variability seen in early local containment policies. This study also provides new insights into the use of social media data in crisis management by integrating offline data to gain an in-depth understanding of public emotional responses, policy development, and local mobility.