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Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gaspar, Rui
Publication Date: 2023
Other Authors: Domingos, S., Toscano, Hugo, Filipe, Jessica, Leiras, Gisela, Raposo, Beatriz, Pereira, Cícero, Godinho, Cristina, Francisco, Rita, Silva, Ana Cláudia, Arriaga, Miguel
Format: Article
Language: eng
Source: Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP)
Download full: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.12/9059
Summary: Monitoring how different people – as ‘social sensors’ – evaluate and respond to crisis such as pandemics, allows tailoring crisis communication to the social perceptions of the situation, at different moments. To gather such evidence, we proposed a index of social perceptions of systemic risk (SPSR), as an indicator of a situational threat compromising risks to physical health, psychological health, the economy, social relations, health system, and others. This indicator was the core of a social sensing approach applied to crisis situations, implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic through a content analysis of more than 130.000 public comments from Facebook™ users, in COVID-19 related publications. This content coding allowed creating a SPSR index monitored during a one-year descriptive longitudinal analysis. This index correlated with co-occurring events within the social system, namely epidemiological indicators across measurement cycles (e.g. new deaths; cumulative number of infection cases; Intensive Care Unit hospitalizations) and tended to reflect the epidemiological situation severity (e.g. with the highest level registered during the worst pandemic wave). However, discrepancies also occurred, with high SPSR registered in a low severity situation, i.e. low number of hospitalizations and deaths (e.g. school year beginning), or low SPSR in a high severity situation (e.g. 2nd pandemic wave during Christmas), showing other factors beyond the epidemiological situation contributing to the social perceptions. After each ‘crisis period’ with SPSR peaking, there was a ‘restoration period’, consistently decreasing towards average levels of the previous measurement cycle. This can either indicate social resilience (recovery and resources potentiation) or risk attenuation after a high-severity period. This study serves as preliminary proof of concept of a crises social sensing approach, enabling monitoring of social system dynamics for various crisis types, such as health crisis or the climate crisis.
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spelling Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisisCOVID-19SARS-CoV-2CrisesSocial sensingSystemic risksCrisis communicationMonitoring how different people – as ‘social sensors’ – evaluate and respond to crisis such as pandemics, allows tailoring crisis communication to the social perceptions of the situation, at different moments. To gather such evidence, we proposed a index of social perceptions of systemic risk (SPSR), as an indicator of a situational threat compromising risks to physical health, psychological health, the economy, social relations, health system, and others. This indicator was the core of a social sensing approach applied to crisis situations, implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic through a content analysis of more than 130.000 public comments from Facebook™ users, in COVID-19 related publications. This content coding allowed creating a SPSR index monitored during a one-year descriptive longitudinal analysis. This index correlated with co-occurring events within the social system, namely epidemiological indicators across measurement cycles (e.g. new deaths; cumulative number of infection cases; Intensive Care Unit hospitalizations) and tended to reflect the epidemiological situation severity (e.g. with the highest level registered during the worst pandemic wave). However, discrepancies also occurred, with high SPSR registered in a low severity situation, i.e. low number of hospitalizations and deaths (e.g. school year beginning), or low SPSR in a high severity situation (e.g. 2nd pandemic wave during Christmas), showing other factors beyond the epidemiological situation contributing to the social perceptions. After each ‘crisis period’ with SPSR peaking, there was a ‘restoration period’, consistently decreasing towards average levels of the previous measurement cycle. This can either indicate social resilience (recovery and resources potentiation) or risk attenuation after a high-severity period. This study serves as preliminary proof of concept of a crises social sensing approach, enabling monitoring of social system dynamics for various crisis types, such as health crisis or the climate crisis.RoutledgeRepositório do ISPAGaspar, RuiDomingos, S.Toscano, HugoFilipe, JessicaLeiras, GiselaRaposo, BeatrizPereira, CíceroGodinho, CristinaFrancisco, RitaSilva, Ana CláudiaArriaga, Miguel2023-03-06T14:55:51Z20232023-01-01T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.12/9059eng1366987710.1080/13669877.2023.2170450info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP)instname:FCCN, serviços digitais da FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologiainstacron:RCAAP2025-03-07T14:58:30Zoai:repositorio.ispa.pt:10400.12/9059Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireinfo@rcaap.ptopendoar:https://opendoar.ac.uk/repository/71602025-05-29T01:03:13.686407Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP) - FCCN, serviços digitais da FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologiafalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis
title Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis
spellingShingle Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis
Gaspar, Rui
COVID-19
SARS-CoV-2
Crises
Social sensing
Systemic risks
Crisis communication
title_short Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis
title_full Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis
title_fullStr Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis
title_full_unstemmed Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis
title_sort Crises social sensing: Longitudinal monitoring of social perceptions of systemic risk during public health crisis
author Gaspar, Rui
author_facet Gaspar, Rui
Domingos, S.
Toscano, Hugo
Filipe, Jessica
Leiras, Gisela
Raposo, Beatriz
Pereira, Cícero
Godinho, Cristina
Francisco, Rita
Silva, Ana Cláudia
Arriaga, Miguel
author_role author
author2 Domingos, S.
Toscano, Hugo
Filipe, Jessica
Leiras, Gisela
Raposo, Beatriz
Pereira, Cícero
Godinho, Cristina
Francisco, Rita
Silva, Ana Cláudia
Arriaga, Miguel
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Repositório do ISPA
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Gaspar, Rui
Domingos, S.
Toscano, Hugo
Filipe, Jessica
Leiras, Gisela
Raposo, Beatriz
Pereira, Cícero
Godinho, Cristina
Francisco, Rita
Silva, Ana Cláudia
Arriaga, Miguel
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv COVID-19
SARS-CoV-2
Crises
Social sensing
Systemic risks
Crisis communication
topic COVID-19
SARS-CoV-2
Crises
Social sensing
Systemic risks
Crisis communication
description Monitoring how different people – as ‘social sensors’ – evaluate and respond to crisis such as pandemics, allows tailoring crisis communication to the social perceptions of the situation, at different moments. To gather such evidence, we proposed a index of social perceptions of systemic risk (SPSR), as an indicator of a situational threat compromising risks to physical health, psychological health, the economy, social relations, health system, and others. This indicator was the core of a social sensing approach applied to crisis situations, implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic through a content analysis of more than 130.000 public comments from Facebook™ users, in COVID-19 related publications. This content coding allowed creating a SPSR index monitored during a one-year descriptive longitudinal analysis. This index correlated with co-occurring events within the social system, namely epidemiological indicators across measurement cycles (e.g. new deaths; cumulative number of infection cases; Intensive Care Unit hospitalizations) and tended to reflect the epidemiological situation severity (e.g. with the highest level registered during the worst pandemic wave). However, discrepancies also occurred, with high SPSR registered in a low severity situation, i.e. low number of hospitalizations and deaths (e.g. school year beginning), or low SPSR in a high severity situation (e.g. 2nd pandemic wave during Christmas), showing other factors beyond the epidemiological situation contributing to the social perceptions. After each ‘crisis period’ with SPSR peaking, there was a ‘restoration period’, consistently decreasing towards average levels of the previous measurement cycle. This can either indicate social resilience (recovery and resources potentiation) or risk attenuation after a high-severity period. This study serves as preliminary proof of concept of a crises social sensing approach, enabling monitoring of social system dynamics for various crisis types, such as health crisis or the climate crisis.
publishDate 2023
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2023-03-06T14:55:51Z
2023
2023-01-01T00:00:00Z
dc.type.status.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv 13669877
10.1080/13669877.2023.2170450
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dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Routledge
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Routledge
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repository.name.fl_str_mv Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP) - FCCN, serviços digitais da FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
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