Science For All? Relating Actors, Links, and Discourses with (Fake) Scientific Claims About COVID-19 on Twitter

IF 0.8 Q3 COMMUNICATION
Victor Piaia, Sabrina Almeida, Tatiana Dourado, Marcela Canavarro, Dalby Dienstbach, Maria Sirleidy Cordeiro, Lucas Roberto da Silva, Danilo Carvalho
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: This article looks at discourses using alleged scientific sources to support or oppose political positions on the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil. Analysis: The authors analyzed more than 3.3 million tweets, sorted according to linguistic rules, from a broader database of tweets related to the pandemic. The focus of this analysis was tweets containing affirmations, allusions, or questionings allegedly referring to scientific studies and hypotheses or authoritative sources in order to legitimize a position as being based on scientific truth. Conclusion and implication: The study shows that scientific sources are largely mobilized in networks of information and disinformation and are heavily present in a vast proportion of anti-science and negationist arguments.
全民科学?将推特上关于COVID-19的(虚假)科学主张与行动者、链接和话语联系起来
背景:本文着眼于利用所谓的科学来源来支持或反对巴西COVID-19大流行的政治立场的话语。分析:作者分析了330多万条推文,根据语言规则进行了分类,这些推文来自与疫情有关的更广泛的推文数据库。该分析的重点是包含肯定,典故或质疑的推文,据称涉及科学研究和假设或权威来源,以使基于科学真理的立场合法化。结论和含义:研究表明,科学来源在很大程度上是在信息和虚假信息网络中被动员起来的,并且大量存在于反科学和否定主义的论点中。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
20.00%
发文量
51
期刊介绍: The objective of the Canadian Journal of Communication is to publish Canadian research and scholarship in the field of communication studies. In pursuing this objective, particular attention is paid to research that has a distinctive Canadian flavour by virtue of choice of topic or by drawing on the legacy of Canadian theory and research. The purview of the journal is the entire field of communication studies as practiced in Canada or with relevance to Canada. The Canadian Journal of Communication is a print and online quarterly. Back issues are accessible with a 12 month delay as Open Access with a CC-BY-NC-ND license. Access to the most recent year''s issues, including the current issue, requires a subscription. Subscribers now have access to all issues online from Volume 1, Issue 1 (1974) to the most recently published issue.
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