| Literature DB >> 32876574 |
Shin Hasegawa1,2, Teppei Suzuki3,4, Ayako Yagahara4,5, Reiko Kanda2, Tatsuo Aono2, Kazuaki Yajima2, Katsuhiko Ogasawara2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Public interest in radiation rose after the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station accident was caused by an earthquake off the Pacific coast of Tohoku on March 11, 2011. Various reports on the accident and radiation were spread by the mass media, and people displayed their emotional reactions, which were thought to be related to information about the Fukushima accident, on Twitter, Facebook, and other social networking sites. Fears about radiation were spread as well, leading to harmful rumors about Fukushima and the refusal to test children for radiation. It is believed that identifying the process by which people emotionally responded to this information, and hence became gripped by an increased aversion to Fukushima, might be useful in risk communication when similar disasters and accidents occur in the future. There are few studies surveying how people feel about radiation in Fukushima and other regions in an unbiased form.Entities:
Keywords: Fukushima nuclear accident; Twitter messaging; belief in rumors; disaster medicine; infodemic; infodemiology; information dissemination; infoveillance; radiation; radioactive hazard release; radioactivity
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32876574 PMCID: PMC7495261 DOI: 10.2196/18662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1The number of tweets per day.
Figure 2The number of tweets by the minute on March 11, 2011.
Figure 3Daily average of tweets' semantic orientation values. RT: retweet.
Figure 4Daily integration of semantic orientation values.
Figure 5F test for target and retweet (RT) groups by week.
Figure 6The number of tweets per 1000 people.
Breakdown of words and tweets by prefecture.
| Prefecture | Number of words representing the area in the prefecture | Number of tweets | Tweets per 1000 people |
| Hokkaido | 635 | 51,871 | 9 |
| Aomori | 158 | 18,181 | 13 |
| Iwate | 545 | 32,319 | 25 |
| Miyagi | 911 | 64,714 | 28 |
| Akita | 200 | 10,473 | 10 |
| Yamagata | 295 | 13,523 | 12 |
| Fukushima | 1535 | 741,178 | 372 |
| Ibaraki | 1013 | 155,482 | 53 |
| Tochigi | 650 | 41,832 | 21 |
| Gunnma | 714 | 26,892 | 13 |
| Saitama | 1647 | 55,702 | 8 |
| Chiba | 1757 | 129,784 | 21 |
| Tokyo | 2614 | 441,874 | 33 |
| Kanagawa | 1766 | 108,510 | 12 |
| Niigata | 380 | 29,238 | 12 |
| Toyama | 100 | 4919 | 5 |
| Ishikawa | 121 | 3461 | 3 |
| Fukui | 137 | 11,437 | 14 |
| Yamanashi | 313 | 7881 | 9 |
| Nagano | 663 | 21,466 | 10 |
| Gifu | 325 | 8582 | 4 |
| Shizuoka | 615 | 36,133 | 10 |
| Aichi | 696 | 21,380 | 3 |
| Mie | 208 | 2339 | 1 |
| Shiga | 131 | 3497 | 2 |
| Kyoto | 319 | 18,232 | 7 |
| Osaka | 677 | 35,824 | 4 |
| Hyogo | 362 | 9341 | 2 |
| Nara | 150 | 3208 | 2 |
| Wakayama | 115 | 2271 | 2 |
| Tottori | 71 | 2774 | 5 |
| Shimane | 79 | 3081 | 4 |
| Okayama | 134 | 5937 | 3 |
| Hiroshima | 195 | 35,599 | 12 |
| Yamaguchi | 109 | 2462 | 2 |
| Tokushima | 75 | 2113 | 3 |
| Kagawa | 77 | 2229 | 2 |
| Ehime | 105 | 3974 | 3 |
| Kochi | 99 | 2596 | 3 |
| Fukuoka | 326 | 12,243 | 2 |
| Saga | 83 | 5757 | 7 |
| Nagasaki | 125 | 48,477 | 34 |
| Kumamoto | 123 | 4620 | 3 |
| Oita | 104 | 3590 | 3 |
| Miyazaki | 106 | 3284 | 3 |
| Kagoshima | 127 | 4559 | 3 |
| Okinawa | 165 | 22,115 | 16 |
| Other | 16,235 | 1,396,553 | N/Aa |
aN/A: not applicable; this was not calculated, as the population size for this category is not known.
Figure 7Weekly ratio of the number of tweets for Fukushima and other prefectures. The dotted line represents the linear approximation.
Figure 8Weekly average ratio of semantic orientation values for Fukushima and other prefectures. The dotted line represents the linear approximation.
Figure 9Weekly average of semantic orientation values for Fukushima Prefecture and other prefectures. RT: retweet.
Chronological listing of events in 2011.
| Date (year/month/day) | Event and details |
| 2011/03/11 | An earthquake off the Pacific coast of Tohoku occurred. |
| 2011/03/12 | Reactor 1 of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station experienced a hydrogen explosion. |
| 2011/03/15 | The damage to reactors 2 and 4 of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station became clear. |
| 2011/03/23 | Thyroid equivalent dose predictions involving iodine-131 for infants (under 1 year old) using the System for Prediction of Environmental Emergency Dose Information were released by the Cabinet Office’s Nuclear Safety Commission. |
| 2011/03/28 | A website visualizing the environmental radioactivity levels all over Kanto was launched. |
| 2011/09/10 | The then-Minister of Economy, Trade, and Industry reportedly resigned after a visit to the exclusion zone of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, where he joked to a journalist, “I’ll give you radiation.” |
| 2011/10/14 | A radium ray source was found under the floor of a private home in Setagaya Ward, Tokyo. |
| 2011/11/11 | A large number of tweets were posted stating “Sign an emergency petition to save the children of Fukushima.” |
| 2011/11/23 | Geiger counter advertisements were posted approximately 2-3 times as often compared to the days before and after. |
| 2011/11/24 | At Tokyo District Court, TEPCO responded, “Any radioactive substances were not the property of TEPCO. Consequently, TEPCO has no responsibility for decontamination.” |
| 2011/11/26 | TEPCO's response was reported in the press. |