Academic explanatory journalism and emerging COVID-19 science: how social media accounts amplify The Conversation’s preprint coverage

IF 1.5 3区 文学 Q2 COMMUNICATION
Alice Fleerackers, Michelle Riedlinger, A. Bruns, J. Burgess
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article examines the public communication of COVID-19-related ‘preprints’ (unreviewed research studies) in a digital media environment. To understand how preprint research flows from preprint server, to media story, to social media audience, we analysed engagement with ‘second-order citations’ – social media posts linking to media coverage of research – using a sample of 41 media stories published by the research amplifier platform The Conversation (TC) that mentioned preprint research during the early months of the pandemic. We applied content analyses to the Facebook and Twitter accounts sharing these stories and analysed the engagement that the posts received. We found that TC stories mentioning preprints were shared among a diverse collection of Facebook and Twitter accounts, providing a second layer of social media amplification of preprint research. Still, posts by a small proportion of ‘elite’ actors – people with prominent roles in media and communications, politics or academia – tended to generate more engagement.
学术解释性新闻和新兴的COVID-19科学:社交媒体帐户如何扩大对话的预印本报道
本文探讨了数字媒体环境下与covid -19相关的“预印本”(未经审查的研究报告)的公共传播。为了了解预印本研究如何从预印本服务器流向媒体报道,再流向社交媒体受众,我们分析了“二阶引用”(与媒体报道相关的社交媒体帖子)的参与度,使用了研究放大平台the Conversation (TC)发表的41篇媒体报道的样本,这些报道提到了大流行最初几个月的预印本研究。我们对分享这些故事的Facebook和Twitter账户进行了内容分析,并分析了这些帖子的参与度。我们发现,提到预印本的TC故事在不同的Facebook和Twitter账户中被分享,为预印本研究提供了第二层社交媒体放大。不过,一小部分“精英”演员——在媒体和传播、政治或学术界扮演重要角色的人——发布的帖子往往会产生更多的参与度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
4.20%
发文量
66
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