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  • Twitter trackers follow public reaction to swine flu

    Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationwo...,5538525.story


    Twitter trackers follow public reaction to swine flu
    A survey on the micro-blogging site offers a rare look into people's thinking during a potentially dangerous outbreak. The quick drop-off in interest troubles researchers.
    By Rebecca Cole
    May 24, 2009

    Reporting from Washington -- As two Stanford University researchers described their experience watching public reactions in the initial days of the swine flu outbreak, it sounded like one of those nature films in which tiny fish dart back and forth in perfect unison.

    The researchers were tracking thousands of Twitter posts pouring into an Internet site. With every twist and turn of the flu reports, the researchers noticed, the mass of tweets swung this way and that as if they were one, even though most of the individual Twitterers had no contact with one another outside of the website.

    It was a rare window into the public psyche amid an explosion of information about a potentially dangerous disease outbreak.


    The researchers -- James Holland Jones, an associate professor of anthropology, and Marcel Salathe, a biologist -- had devised an online survey to gauge people's anxiety about the H1N1 virus as it unfolded.


    Posted early in the outbreak, the survey generated about 8,000 responses in a matter of days, but as doomsday predictions did not come to pass, responses dropped off -- a development that worried Jones.

    "Swine flu is still out there and will be back next flu season," he said. "We've dodged the pandemic for now, but I think it's a very open question whether we have really dodged it."

    The shifting reactions to H1N1 suggested that as the country has become more wired, people may move from indifference to anxiety and back in the blink of an eye.


    After flu cases in Mexico soared at the end of April, U.S. government officials took to the airwaves, declaring a public health emergency as the World Health Organization raised the global threat level to 5 -- the second-most severe.

    With little known about the virus, people's reactions were immediate: Travel to Mexico fell dramatically, pork-belly futures collapsed, and protective masks flew off the shelves. Mexico City virtually shut down -- closing gyms, restaurants, movie theaters and other nonessential businesses -- costing the already teetering economy $2.2 billion in 10 days, according to the nation's finance secretary.

    But as the number of deaths in Mexico attributed to the disease plateaued at about 60 -- and as widespread U.S. fatalities failed to materialize -- the media coverage backed off, causing public interest to flag and some experts to fear that the early warnings may make it harder to get the public's attention in the future.

    "We've cried wolf one too many times here," said Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

    "I actually think this situation has set us back. It really is two strikes, and now we're almost out," he said, referring to initial panic and then loss of interest in recent outbreaks such as SARS and avian flu.


    More than 4 in 10 people followed news about the H1N1 outbreak very closely, according to a Pew Research Center survey. Even in a week filled with news of President Obama's first 100 days in office and Chrysler filing for bankruptcy, attention to news of the swine flu was so great, Pew found, that it became one of the top stories of the year to date.

    Osterholm said the media had to be a crucial part of how health and government officials communicate during such an event. "We need to take a step back and see what we can learn from it -- how we should do it in the future," he said.

    Initial public reaction to H1N1 was way out of proportion to the magnitude of the disease, said Richard Thaler, professor of behavioral science and economics at the University of Chicago.

    "Psychologists say we have two brain systems, the old and the new," Thaler said. "The old one is fast and emotional. When we react by jumping in response to a snake, that's old. The new one is analytic. But often we don't get past the first emotional system."

    The country is a bit on edge, Thaler said, and people on edge are less likely to react in a rational way. "It's hard to imagine a time when so much was going [on] on so many different fronts," he said.

    He added that the Internet "is bad enough," but that the "velocity of rumor and gossip" had increased exponentially with Twitter.


    Dan Ariely, author of "Predictably Irrational," invokes the concept of learned helplessness to describe how people behave when conditioned by a series of seemingly random, harmful events.

    "When we have all these unexplained shocks, we just do what we're told," said Ariely, a professor of behavioral economics at MIT.

    When people don't know how much risk to take in stressful situations, Ariely said, they look around to see what others are doing. But "if other people are doing foolish things," he said, many times "we do it too."


    rcole@tribune.com

  • #2
    Re: Twitter trackers follow public reaction to swine flu

    Originally posted by Shiloh View Post
    Dan Ariely, author of "Predictably Irrational," invokes the concept of learned helplessness to describe how people behave when conditioned by a series of seemingly random, harmful events.

    "When we have all these unexplained shocks, we just do what we're told," said Ariely, a professor of behavioral economics at MIT.

    When people don't know how much risk to take in stressful situations, Ariely said, they look around to see what others are doing. But "if other people are doing foolish things," he said, many times "we do it too."
    All of which suggests to me that being well-prepared allows one to step back and analyze new situations without a knee-jerk reaction, or at least less of one. It's a useful argument to use on people who see us only as "doomers."

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    • #3
      Re: Twitter trackers follow public reaction to swine flu

      Originally posted by Shiloh View Post
      "We've cried wolf one too many times here," said Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

      "I actually think this situation has set us back. It really is two strikes, and now we're almost out," he said, referring to initial panic and then loss of interest in recent outbreaks such as SARS and avian flu.[/B]
      This is a ridiculous statement. Educating the masses in what is an increasingly Dumbed-Down world involves REPEATED pounding of the facts over time. Sure, some people will NEVER listen, and will always be unprepared - and they will be the panicky nuts that cause problems. But many people simply need to hear things over and over, each time learning more, perhaps thinking more about preparation.

      The bottom line is that WHEN the "big one" finally arrives - many people will friek out. They will literally kill each other in some instances in their last minute panicked and greedy efforts to amass supplies - or take from others. It's simply going to happen.

      All this mental game playing about whether or not to simply tell the truth about the facts is stupid. Tell the truth! Follow the guidelines in place to show consistency! Give up the ridiculous notion that their isn't at some point going to be panic. Realize that the REAL PANIC wil NOT come until the last hour.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Twitter trackers follow public reaction to swine flu

        Posted early in the outbreak, the survey generated about 8,000 responses in a matter of days, but as doomsday predictions did not come to pass, responses dropped off -- a development that worried Jones.
        He should keep in mind news articles have fallen off greatly, too. Several weeks ago, NewsNow was moving so fast if I didn't check it every hour or so, new news was off page 1. Now, there are only 8 articles since yesterday and those are mostly repeats.

        Jones need not worry; as soon as there are new developments all the Twitterers will be on them
        The salvage of human life ought to be placed above barter and exchange ~ Louis Harris, 1918

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Twitter trackers follow public reaction to swine flu

          And for those of us who don't tweet, we have FT to keep us updated!

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