TY - JOUR AU - Taneja, Sonia L AU - Passi, Monica AU - Bhattacharya, Sumona AU - Schueler, Samuel A AU - Gurram, Sandeep AU - Koh, Christopher PY - 2021 DA - 2021/6/17 TI - COVID-19大流行早期的社交媒体和研究出版活动:纵向趋势分析JO - J Med Internet Res SP - e26956 VL - 23 IS - 6kw -冠状病毒KW - COVID-19 KW -社交媒体KW -消化病学KW - sars - cov - 2kw -研究KW -文献KW -传播KW - Twitter KW -预印AB -背景:COVID-19大流行凸显了快速传播科学和医学发现的重要性。目前可用于分发科学和临床研究数据和信息的平台包括预印本存储库和传统的同行评议期刊。近年来,社交媒体已成为分享科学和医学发现的有用平台。目的:本研究旨在比较分析在COVID-19大流行的早期阶段,在COVID-19和胃肠病学背景下,社交媒体(特别是Twitter)与预印本和同行评议期刊文章形式的出版物相关的活动。方法:在2019年12月至2020年5月的前6个月期间,收集并分析Twitter(推文和用户数据)、预印本服务器(bioRxiv和medRxiv)以及PubMed数据库中发表的与covid -19相关的数据。将全球和区域地理以及胃肠道器官特定的社交媒体趋势与预印本和出版活动进行比较。Twitter活动与已发表的预印本文章之间的任何关系,以及Twitter活动与已发表的PubMed文章之间的任何关系,按器官系统和地理位置,都使用Spearman的秩序相关性来确定。结果:在6个月的时间里,共检索到来自44609名用户的73079条推文、7164篇期刊出版物和4702篇预印本出版物。Twitter活动(即推文数量)在2020年3月达到顶峰,而预印本和出版活动(即发表的文章数量)在2020年4月达到顶峰。 Overall, strong correlations were identified between trends in Twitter activity and preprint and publication activity (P<.001 for both). COVID-19 data across the three platforms mainly concentrated on pulmonology or critical care, but when analyzing the field of gastroenterology specifically, most tweets pertained to pancreatology, most publications focused on hepatology, and most preprints covered hepatology and luminal gastroenterology. Furthermore, there were significant positive associations between trends in Twitter and publication activity for all gastroenterology topics (luminal gastroenterology: P=.009; hepatology and inflammatory bowel disease: P=.006; gastrointestinal endoscopy: P=.007), except pancreatology (P=.20), suggesting that Twitter activity did not correlate with publication activity for this topic. Finally, Twitter activity was the highest in the United States (7331 tweets), whereas PubMed activity was the highest in China (1768 publications). Conclusions: The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the potential of social media as a vehicle for disseminating scientific information during a public health crisis. Sharing and spreading information on COVID-19 in a timely manner during the pandemic has been paramount; this was achieved at a much faster pace on social media, particularly on Twitter. Future investigation could demonstrate how social media can be used to augment and promote scholarly activity, especially as the world begins to increasingly rely on digital or virtual platforms. Scientists and clinicians should consider the use of social media in augmenting public awareness regarding their scholarly pursuits. SN - 1438-8871 UR - //www.mybigtv.com/2021/6/e26956 UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/26956 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33974550 DO - 10.2196/26956 ID - info:doi/10.2196/26956 ER -
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