| Literature DB >> 26404349 |
Hyekyung Woo1,2, Youngtae Cho3,4, Eunyoung Shim5,6, Kihwang Lee7, Gilyoung Song8.
Abstract
The Sewol ferry disaster severely shocked Korean society. The objective of this study was to explore how the public mood in Korea changed following the Sewol disaster using Twitter data. Data were collected from daily Twitter posts from 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2013 and from 1 March 2014 to 30 June 2014 using natural language-processing and text-mining technologies. We investigated the emotional utterances in reaction to the disaster by analyzing the appearance of keywords, the human-made disaster-related keywords and suicide-related keywords. This disaster elicited immediate emotional reactions from the public, including anger directed at various social and political events occurring in the aftermath of the disaster. We also found that although the frequency of Twitter keywords fluctuated greatly during the month after the Sewol disaster, keywords associated with suicide were common in the general population. Policy makers should recognize that both those directly affected and the general public still suffers from the effects of this traumatic event and its aftermath. The mood changes experienced by the general population should be monitored after a disaster, and social media data can be useful for this purpose.Entities:
Keywords: Sewol ferry disaster; public mood; public trauma; social media; twitter
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26404349 PMCID: PMC4586655 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph120910974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Overall structure of the SOCIALmetrics™ Social Big Data Mining Platform.
Figure 2The Sewol ferry disaster and negative emotional reactions. (A) 20 April, the government declared the affected area a disaster zones. (B) 29 April, South Korean president Park Geun-hye visited the memorial alter for victims of the sunken Sewol ferry. The death toll surpassed 200 as the Sewol search intensified. (C) 09 May, There were reports that the sunken Sewol ferry was beginning to collapse. (D) 17 May, Nationwide rallies in Seoul held to protest government response to ferry sinking. (E) 19 May, President Park Geun-hye apologized for the sinking of the Sewol during an address to the nation. (F) 26, 27 May, Critical rumors about the government response to Sewol disaster was rapidly spread abroad on SNS and other media. These were the most widely re-tweeted on Twitter.
Figure 3Emotional words most frequently associated with suicide. This diagram shows the words most associated with jasal (suicide) and/or wooul (depression) during three years. Individual words inside the blue circle are the words associated with suicide, and the word “Depression” is one of these words. The link is defined by association. These data were collected from daily Twitter posts between January 2011 and December 2013.
Figure 4The Sewol ferry disaster and suicide-related public postings.