| Literature DB >> 24425598 |
Fabian Sudau1, Tim Friede, Jens Grabowski, Janka Koschack, Philip Makedonski, Wolfgang Himmel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Increasing numbers of patients are raising their voice in online forums. This shift is welcome as an act of patient autonomy, reflected in the term "expert patient". At the same time, there is considerable concern that patients can be easily misguided by pseudoscientific research and debate. Little is known about the sources of information used in health-related online forums, how users apply this information, and how they behave in such forums.Entities:
Keywords: CCSVI; Internet utilization; data mining; information dissemination; multiple sclerosis; social media; social networks
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24425598 PMCID: PMC3958625 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.2875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1A screenshot of a forum post.
Primary domain classes.
| Organization | Meant in a broader sense, including foundations, associations, and unions. These are sometimes professional and often promote some kind of agenda. |
| Commerce | Private business selling products or services that do not include treatment. |
| News | Commercial news providers. |
| Other | Various content not fitting into the other classes. |
| Personal | Static content from a single person. |
| Scientific | Sources of scientific work and knowledge including Wikipedia. We included the latter in this class, because its reliability was established in [ |
| Social | Social media websites revolving around communication and user-generated content. |
| Health care providers | Doctors’ offices, clinics, Q&A by professionals. Not limited to Multiple Sclerosis. |
Definition of behavior features.
| Measure | Definition | Rationale |
| Average message length (from [ | Average post content length in characters without counting references. | The message length is an indicator of the amount of effort that is put into a post by a user and it also tells us something about the discussion style of a user. Some users prefer elaborate, essay-like contributions while others use the forum in a more conversational way. |
| Average number of posts per day (from [ | Average number of posts per day that a user made. | This is the most important activity feature of a user and it also provides an insight into the selectiveness of the user. A user with a high number of posts per day over a long time period can be expected to be a frequent visitor, who makes posts regardless of outside events. |
| Average number of references per post | Average number of unique references that are included in a post. | The feature describes the tendency of a user to bring new sources of information to the forum and may also describe the ability to support the stance of the user with evidence. |
| Average number of threads per day (from [ | Average number of different threads a user posts to per day. | While this is also an activity feature, it provides an insight into the focus of interest a user has. A low value may indicate a preference to discuss only specific topics while a high value may indicate a preference to join any sort of discussion. |
| Days active (from [ | Number of days between the first post and the last one. | The feature indicates the consistency of the contribution behavior and posting habits of a user and is an important piece of context information when interpreting the other features. |
| Fraction of posts that were cited | Fraction of the posts that have been cited at least once. | While it can only be assumed what users try to express when they use the citation function, the feature is expected to show the tendency to provoke direct responses from other forum participants. |
| Fraction of relevant posts | Fraction of the posts that were classified as relevant by the Information Retrieval algorithm. | This feature is a solid indicator of the user’s interest in CCSVIa. While it cannot be inferred from this feature alone whether the user has a pro-CCSVI or anti-CCSVI stance, it seems plausible that users with a high interest in CCSVI believe in the hypothesis. |
| Fraction of initiated threads (from [ | Fraction of the threads the user initiated based on the total number of threads the user contributed to. | This feature measures the tendency of a user to start discussions, which is often related to the introduction of new information to the forum. |
| Coverage of users in relevant parts per post | Number of users the user discussed CCSVI with divided by the total number of posts the user made. An uninterrupted sequence of relevant posts is regarded a single discussion. The users that co-occurred in these discussions are counted as discussion partners. | This feature can be described as the efficiency in opinion exchange about CCSVI. |
aCCSVI: Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency
Figure 2Timeline of posted hyperlinks for each domain class.
Figure 3Flowchart of the sampling procedure for clusterings.
Figure 4Venn diagram showing the user sets used in the clusterings.
Figure 5Reference use clusters with number of users in each cluster (n=64 included cases).
Figure 6Radar chart showing aggregated domain class use of each cluster (the user vectors belonging to the cluster are summed up). Each cluster vector is a normalized to be a unit vector. The length of a spoke is proportional to the value it represents.
Figure 7Posting behavior, according to the second clustering, with number of users in each cluster (n=171 included cases).
Figure 8Radar chart showing feature means (overall users within a cluster) of the contribution behavior clusters. The means are min-max-normalized to a [0;1] range. The length of a spoke is proportional to the value it represents.