中文版 | English
题名

How do social media and individual behaviors affect epidemic transmission and control?

作者
通讯作者Zheng,Chunmiao
发表日期
2021-03-20
DOI
发表期刊
ISSN
0048-9697
EISSN
1879-1026
卷号761
摘要

In the outbreak of infectious diseases such as COVID-19, social media channels are important tools for the public to obtain information and form their opinions on infection risk, which can affect their disease prevention behaviors and the consequent disease transmission processes. However, there has been a lack of theoretical investigation into how social media and human behaviors jointly affect the spread of infectious diseases. In this study, we develop an agent-based modeling framework that couples (1) a general opinion dynamics model that describes how individuals form their opinions on epidemic risk with various information sources, (2) a behavioral adoption model that simulates the adoption of disease prevention behaviors, and (3) an epidemiological SEIR model that simulates the spread of diseases in a host population. Through simulating the spread of a coronavirus-like disease in a hypothetical residential area, the modeling results show that social media can make a community more sensitive to external drivers. Social media can increase the public's awareness of infection risk, which is beneficial for epidemic containment, when high-quality epidemic information exists at the early stage of pandemics. However, fabricated and fake news on social media, after a “latent period”, can lead to a significant increase in infection rate. The modeling results provide scientific evidence for the intricate interplay between social media and human behaviors in epidemic dynamics and control, and highlight the importance of public education to promote behavioral changes and the need to correct misinformation and fake news on social media in a timely manner.

关键词
相关链接[Scopus记录]
收录类别
SCI ; SSCI ; EI
语种
英语
学校署名
第一 ; 通讯
资助项目
National Natural Science Foundation of China[51909118,41890852]
WOS研究方向
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
WOS类目
Environmental Sciences
WOS记录号
WOS:000607780900134
出版者
EI入藏号
20210109730398
EI主题词
Autonomous agents ; Behavioral research ; Computational methods ; Diseases ; Social networking (online) ; Transmissions
EI分类号
Mechanical Transmissions:602.2 ; Computer Software, Data Handling and Applications:723 ; Social Sciences:971
ESI学科分类
ENVIRONMENT/ECOLOGY
Scopus记录号
2-s2.0-85098731801
来源库
Scopus
引用统计
被引频次[WOS]:37
成果类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://sustech.caswiz.com/handle/2SGJ60CL/210850
专题工学院_环境科学与工程学院
作者单位
1.State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Integrated Surface Water-Groundwater Pollution Control,School of Environmental Science and Engineering,Southern University of Science and Technology,Shenzhen,518055,China
2.Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering,Stony Brook University,Stony Brook,11794,United States
3.West Windsor-Plainsboro High School North,Plainsboro,08536,United States
第一作者单位环境科学与工程学院
通讯作者单位环境科学与工程学院
第一作者的第一单位环境科学与工程学院
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Du,Erhu,Chen,Eddie,Liu,Ji,et al. How do social media and individual behaviors affect epidemic transmission and control?[J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT,2021,761.
APA
Du,Erhu,Chen,Eddie,Liu,Ji,&Zheng,Chunmiao.(2021).How do social media and individual behaviors affect epidemic transmission and control?.SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT,761.
MLA
Du,Erhu,et al."How do social media and individual behaviors affect epidemic transmission and control?".SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT 761(2021).
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