| Literature DB >> 32960891 |
Jedidiah Carlson1, Kelley Harris1,2.
Abstract
Engagement with scientific manuscripts is frequently facilitated by Twitter and other social media platforms. As such, the demographics of a paper's social media audience provide a wealth of information about how scholarly research is transmitted, consumed, and interpreted by online communities. By paying attention to public perceptions of their publications, scientists can learn whether their research is stimulating positive scholarly and public thought. They can also become aware of potentially negative patterns of interest from groups that misinterpret their work in harmful ways, either willfully or unintentionally, and devise strategies for altering their messaging to mitigate these impacts. In this study, we collected 331,696 Twitter posts referencing 1,800 highly tweeted bioRxiv preprints and leveraged topic modeling to infer the characteristics of various communities engaging with each preprint on Twitter. We agnostically learned the characteristics of these audience sectors from keywords each user's followers provide in their Twitter biographies. We estimate that 96% of the preprints analyzed are dominated by academic audiences on Twitter, suggesting that social media attention does not always correspond to greater public exposure. We further demonstrate how our audience segmentation method can quantify the level of interest from nonspecialist audience sectors such as mental health advocates, dog lovers, video game developers, vegans, bitcoin investors, conspiracy theorists, journalists, religious groups, and political constituencies. Surprisingly, we also found that 10% of the preprints analyzed have sizable (>5%) audience sectors that are associated with right-wing white nationalist communities. Although none of these preprints appear to intentionally espouse any right-wing extremist messages, cases exist in which extremist appropriation comprises more than 50% of the tweets referencing a given preprint. These results present unique opportunities for improving and contextualizing the public discourse surrounding scientific research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32960891 PMCID: PMC7508356 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Comparison of altmetric and bibliometric indicators for preprints attracting extremist and nonextremist audiences.
| Metric | Median value for preprints attracting extremist audiences ( | Median value for all other preprints ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of tweets received | 136 | 110 | 3.75e-05 |
| Mentions in mainstream news sources | 4 | 1 | 5.69e-04 |
| Altmetric Attention Score | 98.4 | 69.2 | 2.83e-09 |
| Academic Audience Fraction (our estimate) | 0.76 | 0.94 | 1.04e-48 |
| Academic Audience Fraction (Altmetric’s estimate) | 0.35 | 0.51 | 3.69e-42 |
| Number of literature citations | 3 | 3 | 0.85 |
| Date posted to bioRxiv | September 18, 2018 | November 4, 2018 | 4.52e-03 |