Statistically Evaluating Social Media Sentiment Trends towards COVID-19 Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions with Event Studies

Thumbnail image

Download files

DOI

https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2021.smm4h-1.1

Language of the publication
English
Date
2021
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Niu, Jingcheng
  • Rees, Erin
  • Ng, Victoria
  • Penn, Gerald
Publisher
Association for Computational Linguistics

Abstract

In the midst of a global pandemic, understanding the public’s opinion of their government’s policy-level, non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) is a crucial component of the health-policy-making process. Prior work on CoViD-19 NPI sentiment analysis by the epidemiological community has proceeded without a method for properly attributing sentiment changes to events, an ability to distinguish the influence of various events across time, a coherent model for predicting the public’s opinion of future events of the same sort, nor even a means of conducting significance tests. We argue here that this urgently needed evaluation method does already exist. In the financial sector, event studies of the fluctuations in a publicly traded company’s stock price are commonplace for determining the effects of earnings announcements, product placements, etc. The same method is suitable for analysing temporal sentiment variation in the light of policy-level NPIs. We provide a case study of Twitter sentiment towards policy-level NPIs in Canada. Our results confirm a generally positive connection between the announcements of NPIs and Twitter sentiment, and we document a promising correlation between the results of this study and a public-health survey of popular compliance with NPIs.

Subject

  • Health

Rights

Pagination

1-6

Peer review

Yes

Article

Journal title
ACL Anthology
Journal volume
Proceedings of the Sixth Social Media Mining for Health (#SMM4H) Workshop and Shared Task

Citation(s)

Jingcheng Niu, Erin Rees, Victoria Ng, and Gerald Penn. 2021. Statistically Evaluating Social Media Sentiment Trends towards COVID-19 Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions with Event Studies. In Proceedings of the Sixth Social Media Mining for Health (#SMM4H) Workshop and Shared Task, pages 1–6, Mexico City, Mexico. Association for Computational Linguistics

Download(s)

URI

Collection(s)

Communicable diseases

Full item page

Full item page

Page details

Date modified: