| Literature DB >> 35347145 |
Jagoba Malumbres-Olarte1,2, Catherine Scott3, Angela Chuang4,5, Stefano Mammola6,7, Valeria Arabesky8,9, Diego Alejandro Barrales-Alcalá10, Aimee Lynn Barrion-Dupo11, Marco Antonio Benamú12,13,14, Tharina L Bird15,16, Maria Bogomolova17, Pedro Cardoso1, Maria Chatzaki18, Ren-Chung Cheng19, Tien-Ai Chu19, Leticia M Classen-Rodríguez20, Iva Čupić21, Naufal Urfi Dhiya'ulhaq22, André-Philippe Drapeau Picard23, Hisham K El-Hennawy24, Mert Elverici25, Caroline S Fukushima1, Zeana Ganem26,27, Efrat Gavish-Regev26, Naledi T Gonnye28, Axel Hacala29, Charles R Haddad30, Thomas Hesselberg31, Tammy Ai Tian Ho32, Thanakorn Into33, Marco Isaia34, Dharmaraj Jayaraman35, Nanguei Karuaera36, Rajashree Khalap37, Kiran Khalap37, Dongyoung Kim38, Tuuli Korhonen1, Simona Kralj-Fišer39, Heidi Land40, Shou-Wang Lin40, Sarah Loboda3, Elizabeth Lowe41, Yael Lubin9,42, Alejandro Martínez43, Zingisile Mbo30, Marija Miličić1,44, Grace Mwende Kioko45, Veronica Nanni34,46, Yusoff Norma-Rashid47, Daniel Nwankwo48, Christina J Painting49, Aleck Pang50, Paolo Pantini51, Martina Pavlek21,52, Richard Pearce53, Booppa Petcharad33, Julien Pétillon29,54, Onjaherizo Christian Raberahona55, Joni A Saarinen1, Laura Segura-Hernández56, Lenka Sentenská57, Gabriele Uhl40, Leilani Walker58,59, Charles M Warui60, Konrad Wiśniewski61, Alireza Zamani62.
Abstract
Mass media plays an important role in the construction and circulation of risk perception associated with animals. Widely feared groups such as spiders frequently end up in the spotlight of traditional and social media. We compiled an expert-curated global database on the online newspaper coverage of human-spider encounters over the past ten years (2010-2020). This database includes information about the location of each human-spider encounter reported in the news article and a quantitative characterisation of the content-location, presence of photographs of spiders and bites, number and type of errors, consultation of experts, and a subjective assessment of sensationalism. In total, we collected 5348 unique news articles from 81 countries in 40 languages. The database refers to 211 identified and unidentified spider species and 2644 unique human-spider encounters (1121 bites and 147 as deadly bites). To facilitate data reuse, we explain the main caveats that need to be made when analysing this database and discuss research ideas and questions that can be explored with it.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35347145 PMCID: PMC8960780 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-022-01197-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 8.501
Fig. 1The potential of news articles as a source of data. This database offers a quantitative baseline to pursue research on the human-dimensions of spiders and their representation in the media. This research may include answering questions related to the cultural component of spider conservation, evaluation of people’s perceptions of spiders via opinion mining techniques, and generation of ecological insights, among others. Original illustration by Jagoba Malumbres-Olarte.
Description of each column in the database.
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
| A unique identifier for each media report. Note that the ID can be repeated when a news item includes multiple species or events. | |
| The link to the online media report. Because this was collected at the time of data mining, some URLs may not be working anymore. | |
| The language in which the media report is written. | |
| The country where the newspaper is published / where the search was conducted. | |
| The newspaper in which the media report is published. | |
| A generic description of the type of Newspaper. Levels: “Traditional newspaper” (Official newspaper in expert’s country, with both a printed and an online version), “Online newspaper” (online-only newspapers), or “Magazine” (for magazine, tabloids, etc.). | |
| The circulation of the Newspaper. Levels: “Regional”, “National”, “International”. | |
| day, month, and year of publication of the media report. | |
| Article title (in the original language). | |
| A unique ID for the human-spider encounter described in the media report, constructed by combining the Country_event, Location_event, and Year_event. An ID_Event can be repeated through the database when the same event was taken up by multiple newspapers. | |
| The year in which the ID_Event took place. | |
| The location (name of city/town/region) in which the ID_Event took place. | |
| The country in which the ID_Event described in the media report took place. | |
| Continent in which the ID_Event described in the media report took place. | |
| Coordinates (longitude, latitude) of the Location_event in decimal degrees (WGS84 reference system) (e.g., 7.47; 44.72). These were derived with Google Maps / Google Earth. | |
| Coordinates (longitude, latitude) of the Country_event in decimal degrees (WGS84 reference system) (e.g., 7.47; 44.72). These were derived with Google Maps / Google Earth. | |
| Coordinates (longitude, latitude) of the Country_search in decimal degrees (WGS84 reference system) (e.g., 7.47; 44.72). These were derived with Google Maps / Google Earth. | |
| The scientific name of the spider species involved in the ID_Event, as reported in the news item. If the species is not mentioned and/or impossible to infer from the text and figures, the notation “Gen sp” is used. | |
| The genus of the spider involved in the ID_Event. | |
| The family of the spider involved in the ID_Event. | |
| The order “Araneae” (to which all spiders belong) is used unless the media report incorrectly assigned other organisms as spiders (e.g., harvestmen, camel spiders, insects). | |
| Does the human-spider encounter result in a bite? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Does the human-spider encounter result in a deadly bite? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Does the media report contain a photograph (or video content) of a spider species? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Does the media report contain a photograph (or video content) of a spider bite? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Was an expert consulted/capable of identifying the spider involved in the ID_Event (arachnologist, entomologist, taxonomist, etc.)? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Was a medical doctor or other similar medical professional consulted in the media report? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Was any other ‘expert’ consulted in the news (e.g., a pest controller)? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Is the media report sensationalistic/overstated? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Does the article contain any taxonomic error? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Does the article contain any error related to spider venom? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Does the article contain any error related to the anatomy of spiders? 1 = yes; 0 = no. | |
| Does the article contain any error in the photographs (or video content)? 1 = yes; 0 = no. Note that we used ‘NA’ if there was no photo present. | |
| Was the article re-assessed (see section “ | |
| The researcher(s) who collected the data associated with the specific media report. | |
| Any other information related to the media report. |
In the database, the R notation ‘NA’ is used for missing values. See main text for more information.
Fig. 2Temporal distribution of unique news articles. (a) Annual distribution of news articles by type of event (partial data for 2020). (b) Monthly distribution of news articles (cumulative of all years) in the northern hemisphere. (c) Monthly distribution of news articles (cumulative of all years) in the southern hemisphere—darker colours highlight months with the highest numbers of news articles.
Countries and languages for which no spider-related news articles were found.
| Language (Country) | Expert in charge | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Basque (France, Spain) | Jagoba Malumbres-Olarte | No news article was found, both using Google or by searching directly the websites of the few newspapers in Basque. |
| English and Setswana (Botswana) | Tharina L. Bird; Naledi T. Gonnye | No news article was found, both using Google or by searching directly the websites of the local newspapers (n = 9). The lack of news was further confirmed by phone (see main text). |
| Galician (Spain) | Alejandro Martínez | No news article was found with direct search in Google and Google News. |
| Icelandic (Iceland) | Ingi Agnarsson (see section “ | No news article was found with direct search in Google and Google News. This lack of news is corroborated by personal communication with the most active entomologist in Iceland. |
| Montenegrin, Serbian, and Croatian (Montenegro) | Marija Miličić | No news article was found for Montenegro with direct search in Google and Google News. |
Fig. 3Geographical coverage of the human-spider encounters in the database. (a) Global distribution of event localities reported in the media report; due to the proximity of several localities, most points appear superimposed. (b) Latitudinal distribution of events. (c) News coverage by spider families. (d) News coverage by spider genera. Danger symbol marks genera with species of medical importance. In c–d, for the four most abundant families, colours represent families.
Fig. 4Content of news articles by continent. (a) Frequency of expert consultation in news articles (any type of expert). (b) Frequency of spider expert consultation (arachnologists, entomologists and similar) in news articles. (c) Frequency of errors in news articles (any type of error). (d) Frequency of sensationalistic versus non-sensationalistic news articles.
Cohen’s kappa coefficients[40] and confidence intervals[41] for independent scoring of the same news articles. .
| Variable | Cohen’s kappa (Confidence interval) | Possible reason for the discrepancy |
|---|---|---|
| Bite | 0.99 (0.98–1.00) | In a few cases, it was not clear from the article description whether the biting event occurred or not. |
| Deadly_bite | 0.94 (0.90–0.97) | In a few cases, it was not clear from the article description whether a fatality was attributable to the spider bite. |
| Figure_species | 0.96 (0.94–0.97) | A photo may be overlooked for some articles filled with Ads or in presence of anti-spam filters. Also, some of the raters did not scored the presence of photos in video link. |
| Figure_bite | 0.98 (0.96–0.99) | |
| Expert_arachnologist | 0.94 (0.91–0.96) | The assessment of all these variables implies a certain degree of subjectivity. See Appendix S |
| Expert_doctor | 0.91 (0.87–0.94) | |
| Expert_others | 0.87 (0.83–0.90) | |
| Sensationalism | 0.89 (0.87–0.91) | |
| Taxonomic_error | 0.88 (0.84–0.92) | |
| Venom_error | 0.90 (0.87–0.92) | |
| Anatomy_error | 0.87 (0.80–0.94) | |
| Photo_error | 0.85 (0.80–0.90) |
Cohen’s kappa statistic ranges from –1 to 1; values above 0.8 indicate very high to near perfect agreements among scorers. We performed this analysis only for rescored English news (N = 1719).
Fig. 5Usage of words in sensationalistic (a) versus non-sensationalistic (b) news articles titles. Word Clouds illustrating the most frequently used 50 words in the titles of English news articles. Common words (stop_words sensu ref. [52]) and the terms used for online searching (e.g., ‘spider’, ‘bite’, ‘sting’, species names) are excluded from the analysis. Text size is proportional to the frequency of each word. Warm colours highlight words that appeal to emotions and are often associated with sensationalistic content. Original silhouettes by Irene Frigo, reproduced from ref. [2].
| Measurement(s) | Newspaper articles on human-spider encounters |
| Technology Type(s) | Manual extraction |
| Sample Characteristic - Organism | Spiders (Arachnida: Araneae) |
| Sample Characteristic - Environment | Online |
| Sample Characteristic - Location | Global |