item: #1 of 45 id: cord-008777-i2reanan author: None title: ECB12: 12th European Congess on Biotechnology date: 2005-07-19 words: 151661 flesch: 40 summary: During the process development for protein production, short time to market and the demand for cheap processes dominate today's process development. Interdependence of the impact of methanol and oxygen supply on protein production with recombinant Pichia pastoris N.K. Khatri, F. Hoffmann Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Institute for Biotechnology, Halle D-06120, Germany. keywords: acid; acid production; activities; activity; addition; adsorption; affinity; aim; alternative; amino; analysis; animal; ankara; antibody; application; applied; approach; assay; bacillus; bacteria; batch; bed; binding; biology; biomass; bioreactor; biosynthesis; biotechnology; capacity; carbon; case; cell; cell growth; cerevisiae; changes; chemical; chitosan; chromatography; coli; column; complex; composition; compounds; concentration; conditions; control; conversion; cost; cultivation; culture; data; days; degradation; denmark; department; design; development; differences; different; disease; dna; e.g.; effect; efficiency; energy; engineering; environmental; enzymatic; enzyme; enzyme activity; enzyme production; ethanol; ethanol production; experiments; expression; extract; factors; fed; fermentation; fermentation process; flow; flux; food; formation; function; gel; gene; gene expression; genome; glucose; group; growth; health; high; host; human; hydrolysis; identification; increase; induction; industrial; industry; influence; institute; interest; intracellular; knowledge; laboratory; level; limited; line; lipase; liquid; mail; mass; maximum; media; medium; metabolic; metabolites; method; microbial; microorganisms; milk; model; molecular; molecules; natural; network; new; niger; nitrogen; non; novel; number; oil; operation; optimization; order; oxygen; parameters; pathway; pcr; peptide; performance; phase; phosphate; plant; plasmid; potential; presence; present; procedure; process; processes; produce; production; production process; productivity; products; project; properties; protein; protein expression; protein production; purification; quality; range; rate; reaction; recombinant; regulation; removal; research; response; resulting; results; role; samples; scale; science; screening; separation; sequence; signal; source; species; specific; stability; state; step; strains; stress; structure; studies; study; substrate; sucrose; sugar; surface; synthesis; system; target; technical; technique; temperature; therapy; time; total; transfer; treatment; turkey; type; university; use; value; vitro; water; weight; work; yeast; yield cache: cord-008777-i2reanan.txt plain text: cord-008777-i2reanan.txt item: #2 of 45 id: cord-011906-ek7joi0m author: Throuvala, Melina A. title: Mind over Matter: Testing the Efficacy of an Online Randomized Controlled Trial to Reduce Distraction from Smartphone Use date: 2020-07-05 words: 11416 flesch: 32 summary: Mediation analyses demonstrated that: (i) emotional self-awareness but not mindful attention mediated the relationship between intervention effects and smartphone distraction, and (ii) online vigilance mediated the relationship between smartphone distraction and problematic social media use. Compared to the control condition at follow-up, students receiving the intervention would report: (i) lower rates of smartphone distraction, smartphone and social media use duration, impulsivity, stress, problematic social media use, FoMO and NoMO and (ii) higher levels of mindful attention, emotional self-awareness, and self-efficacy. keywords: addiction; attention; awareness; cognitive; distraction; effect; intervention; media; mindfulness; online; participants; present; regulation; scale; self; smartphone; smartphone distraction; study; use cache: cord-011906-ek7joi0m.txt plain text: cord-011906-ek7joi0m.txt item: #3 of 45 id: cord-014597-66vd2mdu author: None title: Abstracts from the 25th European Society for Animal Cell Technology Meeting: Cell Technologies for Innovative Therapies: Lausanne, Switzerland. 14-17 May 2017 date: 2018-03-15 words: 50744 flesch: 43 summary: [3] ) -Error frequency does not invalidate use of direct observation methods for cell cloning -Single cell seen by both scientists is highly likely to be monoclonal -During method development, strategies established to control potential sources of error ( Table 1 ) Use of a contemporaneous visualisation approach, a strict control strategy, and a suitable statistical model (which takes into account potential errors) results in: -The CACC method being at least as robust as the LDC method -The CACC method being a reliable, single-step method for cloning to achieve a high P(monoclonality) The main feature of our CI-SCREEN technology is the ability to combine the advantage of cell linesthe unlimited cell supplywith the advantage of primary cellsthe physiological relevance. keywords: addition; analysis; antibodies; antibody; approach; background; batch; bioreactor; cell; cell clones; cell culture; cell density; cell growth; cell line; cho; cho cell; clones; concentration; conditions; control; cultivation; cultures; data; day; development; experiments; expression; fed; feed; fig; fold; free; gene; glucose; glycosylation; high; human; increase; integration; levels; lines; mab; media; medium; method; model; number; parameters; performance; perfusion; phase; platform; process; process development; processes; production; productivity; protein; protein production; quality; rate; results; scale; selection; specific; study; system; table; target; therapeutic; time; titer; transfection; use; vector; viability; virus cache: cord-014597-66vd2mdu.txt plain text: cord-014597-66vd2mdu.txt item: #4 of 45 id: cord-020197-z4ianbw8 author: Celliers, Marlie title: A Systematic Review on Fake News Themes Reported in Literature date: 2020-03-10 words: 4957 flesch: 52 summary: Many studies also refer to it as the filter bubble effect where social media users use social media platforms to suggest or convince other social media users of their cause [33] . Disinformation Destroys Democracy Democracy, information, and libraries in a time of post-truth discourse Attention-based convolutional approach for misinformation identification from massive and noisy microblog posts Third person effects of fake news: fake news regulation and media literacy interventions Good news, bad news, and fake news: going beyond political literacy to democracy and libraries A computational approach for examining the roots and spreading patterns of fake news: evolution tree analysis Effects of group arguments on rumor belief and transmission in online communities: an information cascade and group polarization perspective Beyond misinformation: understanding and coping with the 'Post-Truth' era Virtual Zika transmission after the first U.S. case: who said what and how it spread on Twitter Distance-based customer detection in fake follower markets Exploring users' motivations to participate in viral communication on social media Detecting rumors in social media: a survey Fake news judgement: the case of undergraduate students at Notre Dame University-Louaize The emergence and effects of fake social information: evidence from crowdfunding Fake news and its credibility evaluation by dynamic relational networks: a bottom up approach Understanding the majority opinion formation process in online environments: an exploratory approach to Facebook Social media and the future of open debate: a user-oriented approach to Facebook's filter bubble conundrum Fake news': incorrect, but hard to correct. keywords: factors; fake; information; media; news; spreading; users cache: cord-020197-z4ianbw8.txt plain text: cord-020197-z4ianbw8.txt item: #5 of 45 id: cord-024385-peakgsyp author: Walsh, James P title: Social media and moral panics: Assessing the effects of technological change on societal reaction date: 2020-03-28 words: 6803 flesch: 24 summary: For instance, in their recent study of anti-immigrant crusades, Flores-Yeffal et al. (2019) observed how the indexing of social media communications through hashtags like #IllegalsAreCriminals and #WakeUpAmerica fostered networked discourses and connectedness, helping to construct scapegoats, circulate calls for action, and ensure that xenophobic rhetoric echoed throughout cyber-space (see also Morgan and Shaffer, 2017) . key: cord-024385-peakgsyp authors: Walsh, James P title: Social media and moral panics: Assessing the effects of technological change on societal reaction date: 2020-03-28 journal: nan DOI: 10.1177/1367877920912257 sha: doc_id: 24385 cord_uid: peakgsyp Answering calls for deeper consideration of the relationship between moral panics and emergent media systems, this exploratory article assesses the effects of social media – web-based venues that enable and encourage the production and exchange of user-generated content. keywords: claims; communications; content; data; facebook; information; making; media; messages; news; online; panics; platforms; public; research; social; twitter; users cache: cord-024385-peakgsyp.txt plain text: cord-024385-peakgsyp.txt item: #6 of 45 id: cord-024569-d9opzb6m author: Seo, Mihye title: Amplifying Panic and Facilitating Prevention: Multifaceted Effects of Traditional and Social Media Use During the 2015 MERS Crisis in South Korea date: 2019-07-26 words: 8123 flesch: 39 summary: The null effect of social media use on MERS knowledge might thus result from the conflicting content of social media. Analysis of a two-wave online panel survey found that traditional media use had a positive influence on MERS knowledge while social media use did not. keywords: behaviors; communication; crisis; government; health; information; knowledge; media; media use; mers; public; responses; risk; use cache: cord-024569-d9opzb6m.txt plain text: cord-024569-d9opzb6m.txt item: #7 of 45 id: cord-024640-04goxwsx author: Oates, Sarah title: The easy weaponization of social media: why profit has trumped security for U.S. companies date: 2020-05-11 words: 4360 flesch: 49 summary: This means that scholarly discussions should shift away from questions of ethics or actions (or lack thereof) on the part of social media companies to a frank focus on the security risk posed to democracy by social media. Now that it is impossible for social media companies to ignore the rising evidence of the central role of social media in inculcating conflict, they have defaulted to two key arguments in their defense: freedom of speech and the idea that the problem is limited to a fundamental misuse of their platforms. keywords: companies; disinformation; facebook; information; media; u.s; users; war cache: cord-024640-04goxwsx.txt plain text: cord-024640-04goxwsx.txt item: #8 of 45 id: cord-025856-gc7hdqis author: Chen, Peter John title: New Media and Youth Political Engagement date: 2020-06-02 words: 5559 flesch: 28 summary: Under surveillance: examining Facebook's spiral of silence effects in the wake of NSA internet monitoring The networked young citizen: social media political participation and civic engagement Civic engagement and social media: political participation beyond protest Is there social capital in a social network site? In: Sobaci MZ (ed) Social media and local governments What is a discourse approach to Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other social media: connecting with other academic fields Building citizen-based electronic democracy efforts. keywords: capacity; democracy; engagement; internet; media; new; online; participation; people; public; technologies; youth cache: cord-025856-gc7hdqis.txt plain text: cord-025856-gc7hdqis.txt item: #9 of 45 id: cord-026579-k3w8h961 author: Carr, Paul R. title: Shooting Yourself First in the Foot, then in the Head: Normative Democracy Is Suffocating, and then the Coronavirus Came to Light date: 2020-06-10 words: 8712 flesch: 41 summary: I highlight three central arguments: (1) Social media, and, consequently, citizen engagement are becoming a significant filter that can potentially re-imagine the political, economic, and social worlds, which increasingly bleed over to how we might develop and engage with ‘democracy’; to this end, I introduce a brief case study on the nefarious interpretation of the killing of Jamal Khashoggi in 2018 to underscore the tension points in normative democracy; (2) Capitalism, or neoliberalism, needs to be more fully exposed, interrogated, and confronted if ‘normative, representative, hegemonic, electoral democracy’ is to be re-considered, re-imagined, and re-invented; the perpetuation of social inequalities lays bare the frailty of normative democratic institutions; (3) Covid-19 has exposed the fault lines and fissures of normative democracy, illustrating here the ‘common sense’ ways that power imbalances are sustained, which leaves little room for social solidarity; I present herein the case of the economic/labor dynamic in Quebec during the coronavirus. Social media is an exemplary feature of this new environment and can help us draw out the fundamental question if greater media, communication, and online involvement can lead to more robust, critical democratic forms of citizen participation. keywords: care; carr; case; covid-19; democracy; education; engagement; health; issues; media; movements; news; pandemic; people; time; usa; world cache: cord-026579-k3w8h961.txt plain text: cord-026579-k3w8h961.txt item: #10 of 45 id: cord-029051-ib189vow author: Li, Jianjun title: Research on Crowd-Sensing Task Assignment Based on Fuzzy Inference PSO Algorithm date: 2020-06-22 words: 3684 flesch: 48 summary: At the same time, applying FPSO algorithm for task assignment can greatly shorten task completion time, reduce platform perceived cost and improve user load balance. This paper considers the problem of poor user load balance encountered in the process of task problems, combines task completion time and perceived cost, establishes single objective task assignment optimization model, and proposes fuzzy inference particle swarm task assignment method to solve task assignment problem in discrete space. keywords: algorithm; assignment; task; task assignment; time; user cache: cord-029051-ib189vow.txt plain text: cord-029051-ib189vow.txt item: #11 of 45 id: cord-031941-bxrjftnl author: Androutsopoulos, Jannis title: Investigating digital language/media practices, awareness, and pedagogy: Introduction date: 2020-09-16 words: 3014 flesch: 27 summary: Based on original research, the six articles in this Special Issue examine the relationship between digital language practices and critical awareness of language and digital media, and explore how insights in everyday practices and understandings of digital communication may inform language pedagogy in a digital age. Shaila Sultana and Sender Dovchin, in their article on Relocalization in digital language practices of university students in Asian peripheries, present data from a digital ethnography project with university students in Bangladesh and Mongolia. keywords: articles; awareness; communication; language; media; practices; research; teaching cache: cord-031941-bxrjftnl.txt plain text: cord-031941-bxrjftnl.txt item: #12 of 45 id: cord-031964-khbzbjuu author: Coşkun, Gülçin Balamir title: Media capture strategies in new authoritarian states: the case of Turkey date: 2020-09-16 words: 7946 flesch: 49 summary: The vicious circle of media capture In the service of power: Media capture and the threat to democracy Turkey's judiciary and the drift toward competitive authoritarianism WhatsApp groups: Another side to censorship in Turkey Tekelci medyada örgütsüz gazeteci Inequality and media capture Illiberal democracy and the struggle on the right Turkey: Killings, disappearances and torture Uzan grubuna el konuldu RTÜK'ten Fatih Portakal'ın sözleri nedeniyle FOX TV'ye ceza Erdogan lawyer files an appeal to RTÜK demanding TV program suspension IPI troubled by tax case targeting Turkey media owner keywords: akp; article; capture; erdogan; government; group; journalists; media; media capture; media outlets; newspapers; outlets; public; state; strategies; turkey cache: cord-031964-khbzbjuu.txt plain text: cord-031964-khbzbjuu.txt item: #13 of 45 id: cord-034975-gud4dow5 author: Kalpokas, Ignas title: Problematising reality: the promises and perils of synthetic media date: 2020-11-09 words: 4497 flesch: 35 summary: It discusses three of the most notable current forms of this emerging form of content: deepfakes, virtual influencers, and augmented and virtual reality (collectively known as extended reality). A further step towards the problematisation of reality is the capacity for immersion in a synthetic environment through Augmented and Virtual Reality technologies, typically referred to collectively as Extended Reality (ER). keywords: content; deepfakes; experience; human; influencers; media; reality; synthetic; world cache: cord-034975-gud4dow5.txt plain text: cord-034975-gud4dow5.txt item: #14 of 45 id: cord-126250-r65q535f author: Zavarrone, Emma title: CO.ME.T.A. -- covid-19 media textual analysis. A dashboard for media monitoring date: 2020-04-16 words: 1785 flesch: 40 summary: It is not an easy task to understand how communication from public health authorities or social media contents affect public attention and health-related risk evaluation and perception in these situations. key: cord-126250-r65q535f authors: Zavarrone, Emma; Grassia, Maria Gabriella; Marino, Marina; Cataldo, Rasanna; Mazza, Rocco; Canestrari, Nicola title: CO.ME.T.A. -- covid-19 media textual analysis. keywords: analysis; communication; media; network; topics cache: cord-126250-r65q535f.txt plain text: cord-126250-r65q535f.txt item: #15 of 45 id: cord-145300-isnqbetr author: Nakov, Preslav title: Can We Spot the"Fake News"Before It Was Even Written? date: 2020-08-10 words: 3571 flesch: 47 summary: Determining rumour veracity and support for rumours Predicting the leading political ideology of Youtube channels using acoustic, textual and metadata information Detecting toxicity in news articles: Application to Bulgarian CheckThat! Task 2: Evidence and Factuality ClaimRank: Detecting check-worthy claims in Arabic and English Linguistic signals under misinformation and fact-checking: Evidence from user comments on social media We built a fake news & click-bait filter: What happened next will blow your mind Fully automated fact checking using external sources Detecting deception in political debates using acoustic and textual features Multi-view models for political ideology detection of news articles keywords: check; checking; claims; fact; media; news; task; users cache: cord-145300-isnqbetr.txt plain text: cord-145300-isnqbetr.txt item: #16 of 45 id: cord-162326-z7ta3pp9 author: Shahi, Gautam Kishore title: AMUSED: An Annotation Framework of Multi-modal Social Media Data date: 2020-10-01 words: 6455 flesch: 57 summary: The framework is designed to mitigate the issues of collecting and annotating social media data by cohesively combining machine and human in the data collection process. Usually, researchers encounter several problems while conducting research using social media data, like data collection, data sampling, data annotation, quality of the data, Copyright © 2020, Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (www.aaai.org). keywords: annotation; articles; data; framework; media; misinformation; news; platforms; post; step; twitter cache: cord-162326-z7ta3pp9.txt plain text: cord-162326-z7ta3pp9.txt item: #17 of 45 id: cord-197474-2wzf7nzz author: Baly, Ramy title: We Can Detect Your Bias: Predicting the Political Ideology of News Articles date: 2020-10-11 words: 5364 flesch: 47 summary: Quantifying media bias through crowdsourced content analysis SemEval-2020 task 11: Detection of propaganda techniques in news articles A survey on computational propaganda detection Fine-grained analysis of propaganda in news articles Unsupervised user stance detection on Twitter The Fox News effect: Media bias and voting BERT: Pre-training of deep bidirectional transformers for language understanding Predicting the leading political ideology of YouTube channels using acoustic, textual, and metadata information On the nature of real and perceived bias in the mainstream media Domain-adversarial training of neural networks Mass media and American politics NELA-GT-2019: A large multi-labelled news dataset for the study of misinformation in news articles Long Short-Term Memory Assessing the news landscape: A multi-module toolkit for evaluating the credibility of news Different spirals of sameness: A study of content sharing in mainstream and alternative media Red media, blue media: Evidence of ideological selectivity in media use Team Bertha von Suttner at SemEval-2019 Task 4: Hyperpartisan news detection using ELMo sentence representation convolutional network SemEval-2019 Task 4: Hyperpartisan news detection Multi-view models for political ideology detection of news articles Which side are you on? key: cord-197474-2wzf7nzz authors: Baly, Ramy; Martino, Giovanni Da San; Glass, James; Nakov, Preslav title: We Can Detect Your Bias: Predicting the Political Ideology of News Articles date: 2020-10-11 journal: nan DOI: nan sha: doc_id: 197474 cord_uid: 2wzf7nzz We explore the task of predicting the leading political ideology or bias of news articles. keywords: articles; bias; et al; ideology; level; media; news cache: cord-197474-2wzf7nzz.txt plain text: cord-197474-2wzf7nzz.txt item: #18 of 45 id: cord-254191-5cxv9l3c author: Islam, A.K.M. Najmul title: Misinformation sharing and social media fatigue during COVID-19: An affordance and cognitive load perspective date: 2020-07-12 words: 11924 flesch: 44 summary: Prior research also suggests that social media users gain social capital through communicating and self-promoting themselves in social media (de Zúñiga et al., 2017) . Caution: wit and humor during the COVID-19 pandemic A two-staged SEM-neural network approach for understanding and predicting the determinants of m-commerce adoption Labor Markets During the COVID-19 Crisis: A Preliminary View (No. w27017) Social media social capital, offline social capital, and citizenship: exploring asymmetrical social capital effects keywords: covid-19; et al; exploration; factors; fatigue; information; information sharing; media; misinformation; news; overload; people; self; sharing; smf; social; use cache: cord-254191-5cxv9l3c.txt plain text: cord-254191-5cxv9l3c.txt item: #19 of 45 id: cord-258389-1u05w7r4 author: Verma, Anju title: Animal tissue culture principles and applications date: 2020-06-26 words: 12099 flesch: 45 summary: Cell culture is the process by which human, animal, or insect cells are grown in a favorable artificial environment. The cultures were originally created to study the development of cell cultures and normal physiological events such as nerve development. keywords: animal; animal cell; cell; cell culture; cell lines; culture; development; factors; gene; growth; human; lines; media; medium; number; phase; production; protein; serum; system; tissue; type; vaccine; virus; vivo cache: cord-258389-1u05w7r4.txt plain text: cord-258389-1u05w7r4.txt item: #20 of 45 id: cord-275152-8if8shva author: Olum, R. title: Social Media Platforms for Health Communication and Research in the Face of COVID-19 Pandemic: A Cross Sectional Survey in Uganda. date: 2020-05-05 words: 2485 flesch: 51 summary: date: 2020-05-05 journal: nan DOI: 10.1101/2020.04.30.20086553 sha: doc_id: 275152 cord_uid: 8if8shva Objectives: (1) To examine the usage of social media and other forms of media among medical students (MS) and healthcare professionals (HCPs) in Uganda. (2) To assess the perceived usefulness of social media and other forms of media for COVID-19 public health campaigns. keywords: covid-19; license; media; preprint; students cache: cord-275152-8if8shva.txt plain text: cord-275152-8if8shva.txt item: #21 of 45 id: cord-277824-q7blp3we author: Bilal title: Role of electronic media in mitigating the psychological impacts of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) date: 2020-04-29 words: 818 flesch: 45 summary: key: cord-277824-q7blp3we authors: Bilal; Latif, Faiza; Bashir, Muhammad Farhan; Komal, Bushra title: Role of electronic media in mitigating the psychological impacts of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) date: 2020-04-29 journal: Psychiatry Res DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2020.113041 sha: doc_id: 277824 cord_uid: q7blp3we The current research initiative focuses on the role of Pakistani media in eliminating panic and depression among health practitioners and the general public due to the outbreak of novel coronavirus (COVID-19). What about children who are the future of our society and are already suffering from boredom and depression during the current situation, therefore media should play its role in arranging some special programs aimed at promoting learning activities for children and it will be beneficial for the mental and physical developments of these children who are the future of The COVID-19 (Coronavirus) Pandemic: Reflections on the Roles of Librarians and Information Professionals Role of Media to inform Public about depression related diseases Covid-19 risks and response in South Asia The global macroeconomic impacts of COVID-19: Seven scenarios Are sedentary television watching and computer use behaviors associated with anxiety and depressive disorders? keywords: media; public cache: cord-277824-q7blp3we.txt plain text: cord-277824-q7blp3we.txt item: #22 of 45 id: cord-279207-azh21npc author: Sharma, Manoj Kumar title: Mental Health Issues Mediate Social Media Use in Rumors: Implication for Media Based Mental Health Literacy date: 2020-05-07 words: 1288 flesch: 34 summary: A year-round content analysis against World Health Organization guidelines Assessing the quality of media reporting of suicide news in India against World Health Organization guidelines: a content analysis study of nine major newspapers in Tamil Nadu Adolescent suicide in India: Significance of public health prevention plan Assessing the use of media reporting recommendations by the World Health Organization in suicide news published in the most influential media sources in China Health and social media: Perfect storm of information Is suicide reporting in Indian newspapers responsible? Another concern is when it comes to health related information sharing on social media. keywords: health; information; media; social; suicide cache: cord-279207-azh21npc.txt plain text: cord-279207-azh21npc.txt item: #23 of 45 id: cord-282194-0sjmf1yn author: Cherak, Stephana J. title: Impact of social media interventions and tools among informal caregivers of critically ill patients after patient admission to the intensive care unit: A scoping review date: 2020-09-11 words: 5412 flesch: 37 summary: Ultimately, the relatively rapid evolution of social media means studies on usage will nearly exclusively reflect social media use of the past. Advances in Patient Safety Lessons Learned From Web-and Social Media-Based Educational Initiatives by Pulmonary The World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine Newsletter Online, social media and mobile technologies for psychosis treatment: a systematic review on novel user-led interventions Methods of using real-time social media technologies for detection and remote monitoring of HIV outcomes Social media use in healthcare: A systematic review of effects on patients and on their relationship with healthcare professionals Retiring the Term Futility in Value-Laden Decisions Regarding Potentially Inappropriate Medical Treatment Ethical dilemmas due to the Covid-19 pandemic Bereavement Support on the Frontline of COVID-19: Recommendations for Hospital Clinicians Rehabilitation After Critical Illness in People With COVID-19 Infection Intensive care management of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): challenges and recommendations We thank Dr. Diane Lorenzetti (University of Calgary) for the development of the search strategies. keywords: care; caregivers; health; media; patient; review; studies; study; use cache: cord-282194-0sjmf1yn.txt plain text: cord-282194-0sjmf1yn.txt item: #24 of 45 id: cord-282966-ew8lwmsn author: Haddow, George D. title: Communicating During a Public Health Crisis date: 2014-07-22 words: 5435 flesch: 52 summary: According to a 2012 report on the use of social media by state health departments, 86.7 percent of the state health departments reported they had a Twitter account, 56 percent a Facebook account, and 43 percent a YouTube channel; but, On average, state health departments made one post per day on social media sites, and this was primarily to distribute information; there was very little interaction with audiences. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention is actively using social media, but social media use by public health agencies keywords: crisis; data; emergency; flu; health; information; media; messages; people; public; risk; use cache: cord-282966-ew8lwmsn.txt plain text: cord-282966-ew8lwmsn.txt item: #25 of 45 id: cord-288024-1mw0k5yu author: Wang, Wei title: Entrepreneurial entry: The role of social media date: 2020-09-29 words: 8521 flesch: 34 summary: The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations Beyond social capital: the role of entrepreneurs' social competence in their financial success Necessity and opportunity entrepreneurs: survival factors Social media and innovation: a systematic literature review and future research directions Entrepreneurial behavior: its nature, scope, recent research, and agenda for future research From friendfunding to crowdfunding: relevance of relationships, social media, and platform activities to crowdfunding performance What the numbers tell: the impact of human, family and financial capital on women and men's entry into entrepreneurship in Turkey Networking, entrepreneurship and microbusiness behaviour The joint moderating role of trust propensity and gender on consumers' online shopping behavior How to enhance SMEs customer involvement using social media: the role of Social CRM Characters' persuasion effects in advergaming: role of brand trust, product involvement, and trust propensity The role of social and human capital among nascent entrepreneurs How and when social media affects innovation in start-ups. We further posit the relationship between social media use and entrepreneurial entry depends on individuals’ trust propensity based on the nature of social media as weak ties. keywords: entry; et al; individuals; information; media; media use; network; offline; propensity; research; social; trust; use cache: cord-288024-1mw0k5yu.txt plain text: cord-288024-1mw0k5yu.txt item: #26 of 45 id: cord-288159-rzqlmgb1 author: Marin, Lavinia title: Three contextual dimensions of information on social media: lessons learned from the COVID-19 infodemic date: 2020-08-26 words: 4906 flesch: 46 summary: By employing cognitive heuristics, social media users tend to rely on their friends and their endorsements in selecting what information to trust or engage with (Koroleva et al. 2010, p. 5) . Both strategies are dangerous because social media users are also citizens who are instrumental in the efforts to curb down the pandemic. keywords: context; infodemic; information; mdi; measures; media; pandemic; users cache: cord-288159-rzqlmgb1.txt plain text: cord-288159-rzqlmgb1.txt item: #27 of 45 id: cord-290777-eylp4k53 author: Ippolito, Giuseppe title: Toning down the 2019-nCoV media hype—and restoring hope date: 2020-03-31 words: 1023 flesch: 42 summary: Reporting of the situation in real-time from the public on social media could lead to more accurate collating of information by the media. Therefore, it is time to reduce the hype and hysteria surrounding the 2019-nCoV epidemic and reduce sens ation alisation of new information, especially on social media, where many outlets aim to grab attention from followers. keywords: media; ncov; public cache: cord-290777-eylp4k53.txt plain text: cord-290777-eylp4k53.txt item: #28 of 45 id: cord-291596-lp5di10v author: Singh, Shweta title: “Is compulsive social media use amid COVID-19 pandemic addictive behavior or coping mechanism? date: 2020-07-07 words: 1327 flesch: 36 summary: Considering its widespread use across ages, social media is known to be a source of social reinforcement and validation. During the current global crises when 'social distancing' has become a norm, over-engagement in social media has become a 'psychological necessity' thereby helping people to address their needs of human J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f interaction and coping with the pandemic. keywords: health; media; pandemic; people cache: cord-291596-lp5di10v.txt plain text: cord-291596-lp5di10v.txt item: #29 of 45 id: cord-292774-k1zr9yrg author: Haldule, Saloni title: Post-publication promotion in rheumatology: a survey focusing on social media date: 2020-09-13 words: 3451 flesch: 44 summary: why and how we're doing it Exploring the role of infographics for summarizing medical literature Immunology and social networks: an approach towards impact assessment An Introduction to Social Media for Scientists Social media and health care professionals: benefits, risks, and best practices Evaluating altmetrics Mendeley readership altmetrics for medical articles: An analysis of 45 fields-Thelwall-2016-Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology-Wiley Online Library SOCIAL MEDIA FOR MEDICAL JOURNALS Perception about social media use by rheumatology journals: survey among the attendees of IRACON 2019 Social media use among young rheumatologists and basic scientists: results of an international survey by the Emerging EULAR Network (EMEU-NET) Social media for research, education and practice in rheumatology #EULAR2018: the annual European congress of rheumatology-a twitter hashtag analysis Podcasting in medical education: a review of the literature Coronavirus Research Moves Faster Than Medical Journals-Bloomberg MedFact: towards improving veracity of medical information in social media using applied machine learning Letter to the editor: social media is a double-edged sword in the COVID-19 pandemic Challenges for social media editors in rheumatology journals: an outlook Impact of social media on academic performance and interpersonal relation: a cross-sectional study among students at a tertiary medical center in East India This may be improved by educating healthcare professionals about the various aspects of social media use [21] . keywords: abstracts; authors; information; media; promotions; rheumatology; survey; use cache: cord-292774-k1zr9yrg.txt plain text: cord-292774-k1zr9yrg.txt item: #30 of 45 id: cord-296966-ivp74j43 author: Gottlieb, Michael title: Information and Disinformation: Social Media in the COVID‐19 Crisis date: 2020-05-31 words: 1144 flesch: 41 summary: Acad Emerg Med DOI: 10.1111/acem.14036 sha: doc_id: 296966 cord_uid: ivp74j43 The novel coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID‐19) is a global pandemic with over 4.7 million cases and 316,000 deaths worldwide.(1) Social media, defined as “electronic communication through which users create online communities to share information, ideas, personal messages, and other content,”(2) has played an important role during the COVID‐19 pandemic. There are several key benefits to social media during times of national crises. keywords: healthcare; information; media cache: cord-296966-ivp74j43.txt plain text: cord-296966-ivp74j43.txt item: #31 of 45 id: cord-301525-gcls69om author: van Ewijk, Bernadette J. title: Online Display Advertising for CPG Brands: (When) Does It Work? date: 2020-08-18 words: 12048 flesch: 49 summary: Most brands use a mix of advertising media (Panel B). The former is needed given that advertising media differ on multiple dimensions (e.g., the way in which information is presented and/or the speed at which information is transferred by the medium (Dijkstra et al., 2005) that may shape the duration of their effects. keywords: ads; advertising; brand; category; display; effects; media; medium; online; print; sales; spending cache: cord-301525-gcls69om.txt plain text: cord-301525-gcls69om.txt item: #32 of 45 id: cord-307292-de4lbc24 author: Rosenberg, Hananel title: OMG, R U OK? [Image: see text]: Using Social Media to Form Therapeutic Relationships with Youth at Risk date: 2020-08-17 words: 10199 flesch: 45 summary: Remarkably, new opportunities for reaching out and supporting youth at risk have aroused with the outbreak of online social media. The goal of this study is to examine whether and how youth care workers utilize social media communications for reaching out to detached adolescents and providing them emotional support. keywords: adolescents; communication; help; interviewees; media; online; relationships; research; risk; risk youth; time; treatment; use; work; youth cache: cord-307292-de4lbc24.txt plain text: cord-307292-de4lbc24.txt item: #33 of 45 id: cord-319960-pm95v31c author: Widmar, Nicole title: Public Perceptions of Veterinarians from Social and Online Media Listening date: 2020-06-06 words: 4374 flesch: 39 summary: The Netbase platform is a recognized leader in social media search engines, listening, analytics, and social media intelligence. In other words, it could be that social media posts from veterinary medical professionals are referencing these topics. keywords: health; media; pet; posts; search; sentiment; social; veterinarians; veterinary; week cache: cord-319960-pm95v31c.txt plain text: cord-319960-pm95v31c.txt item: #34 of 45 id: cord-324654-nnojaupv author: Vordos, Nick title: How 3D Printing and Social Media Tackles the PPE Shortage during Covid – 19 Pandemic date: 2020-06-07 words: 3044 flesch: 48 summary: The future of social media in marketing The emerging use of social media for health-related purposes in low and middle-income countries: A scoping review Patients' and health professionals' use of social media in health care: Motives, barriers and expectations Use of Social Media in Health Communication: Findings From the Health Information National Trends Survey The digital incunabula: rock Additive manufacturing (3D printing): A review of materials, methods, applications and challenges 3D Printing in Pharmaceutical and Medical Applications -Recent Achievements and Challenges Global Health Observatory (GHO) data, World Health Observatory In Memoriam: Healthcare Workers Who Have Died of COVID-19 Social media as crisis platform: The future of community maps/crisis maps Social media and crisis management: CERC, search strategies, and Twitter content Social Media in Crisis Management: An Evaluation and Analysis of Crisis Informatics Research How COVID-19 Is Testing Social Media's Ability to Fight Misinformation eMarketer Marking of personal protective equipment Minimizing occupational hazards in endoscopy: personal protective equipment, radiation safety, and ergonomics Attenuated total reflectance infrared spectroscopy as a screening tool for the urinary calculi characterization NHS staff 'gagged' over coronavirus shortages American College of Surgeons Statement on PPE Shortages during the COVID-19 Pandemic American College of Surgeons Shortage of personal protective equipment endangering health workers worldwide shortage-of-personal-protective-equipment-endangering-health-workers-worldwide Social Media in Disaster Risk Reduction and Crisis Management Examining the Role of Social Media in Effective Crisis Management: The Effects of Crisis Origin, Information Form, and Source on Publics' Crisis Responses The dynamic role of social media during Hurricane #Sandy: An introduction of the STREMII model to weather the storm of the crisis lifecycle 40+ the population is informed for health issues and communicate with health professionals through social media keywords: crisis; health; media; ppe; printing; social cache: cord-324654-nnojaupv.txt plain text: cord-324654-nnojaupv.txt item: #35 of 45 id: cord-331766-sdbagsud author: Kung, Janet WC. title: How surgeons should behave on social media date: 2020-08-30 words: 2730 flesch: 36 summary: It considers some of the important issues around privacy, patient confidentiality and professionalism and discusses some of the common pitfalls of using social media as a surgeon. Social media has fundamentally changed the way we interact with the world and it has become an integral part of many surgeons' personal and professional lives. keywords: information; media; online; patient; surgeons; use cache: cord-331766-sdbagsud.txt plain text: cord-331766-sdbagsud.txt item: #36 of 45 id: cord-331867-mqqtzf8k author: Shahsavari, Shadi title: Conspiracy in the time of corona: automatic detection of emerging COVID-19 conspiracy theories in social media and the news date: 2020-10-28 words: 12701 flesch: 46 summary: These five communities, along with several other large communities, form the main reservoir of actants and inter-actant relationships for the creation of conspiracy theory narrative frameworks. The cross-correlation function of these relative coverage scores can provide interesting insight into the co-existence of conspiracy theory communities in the two corpora where is the number of offset days between the news and 4Chan data (see Fig. 5 ). keywords: actants; communities; community; conspiracy; conspiracy theories; corpus; framework; information; media; narrative; news; news media; nodes; pandemic; phrases; relationships; stories; sub; theory; threat; virus cache: cord-331867-mqqtzf8k.txt plain text: cord-331867-mqqtzf8k.txt item: #37 of 45 id: cord-332181-k90i33gp author: Degeling, Chris title: Hendra in the news: Public policy meets public morality in times of zoonotic uncertainty date: 2012-12-29 words: 7063 flesch: 39 summary: London: Stationery Office Reproduction and nutritional stress are risk factors for Hendra virus infection in little red flying foxes (Pteropus scapulatus) Urban habituation, ecological connectivity and epidemic dampening: the emergence of Hendra virus from flying foxes (Pteropus spp To cull or not to cull is the burning question. it is surprising to find that until 2011, the media paid little attention to the link between Hendra virus and flying fox populations. keywords: disease; flying; foxes; government; health; hendra; hendra virus; horses; human; media; news; policy; public; risk; virus cache: cord-332181-k90i33gp.txt plain text: cord-332181-k90i33gp.txt item: #38 of 45 id: cord-334574-1gd9sz4z author: Little, Jessica S. title: Tweeting from the Bench: Twitter and the Physician-Scientist Benefits and Challenges date: 2020-11-11 words: 3167 flesch: 35 summary: Twitter use is rising amongst healthcare providers nationally and internationally, including in the field of hematology and oncology. The use and impact of Twitter at medical conferences: Best practices and Twitter etiquette Social medicine: Twitter in healthcare Scientists in the Twitterverse Twitter 101 and beyond: introduction to social media platforms available to practicing hematologist/oncologists Risks and benefits of twitter use by hematologists/oncologists in the era of digital medicine Twitter as a tool for communication and knowledge exchange in academic medicine: a guide for skeptics and novices Trends in twitter use by physicians at the American society of clinical oncology annual meeting Analysis of the use and impact of Twitter during American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meetings from 2011 to 2016: focus on advanced metrics and user trends Social media and the practicing hematologist: Twitter 101 for the busy healthcare provider Tweeting the meeting Leveraging social media for cardio-oncology Using social media to promote academic research: identifying the benefits of twitter for sharing academic work Academics and social networking sites: benefits, Problems and Tensions in Professional Engagement with Online Networking First demonstration of one academic institution's consideration of incorporation of social media scholarship into academic promotion Professionalism in the digital age Social media and physicians' online identity crisis Physicians on Twitter Physician violations of online professionalism and disciplinary actions: a national survey of state medical boards Report of the AMA council on ethical and judicial affairs: professionalism in the use of social media Evaluating unconscious bias: speaker introductions at an international oncology conference Gender differences in publication rates in oncology: looking at the past, present, and future Gender differences in Twitter use and influence among health policy and health services researchers Can tweets predict citations? keywords: impact; media; medical; physicians; research; tweets; twitter; use cache: cord-334574-1gd9sz4z.txt plain text: cord-334574-1gd9sz4z.txt item: #39 of 45 id: cord-342360-d7qc20i4 author: Mohamad, Siti Mazidah title: Creative Production of ‘COVID‐19 Social Distancing’ Narratives on Social Media date: 2020-06-03 words: 6075 flesch: 32 summary: Using qualitative content analysis (QCA) data of social media content by Bruneian youth, this paper reveals the localised and contextualised creative production of five ‘social distancing’ narratives as a response to the national and global concerns in times of a global pandemic: narrative of fear; narrative of responsibility; narrative of annoyance; narrative of fun; and narrative of resistance. The growth in the size of the digitally connected group consuming social media content in the nation justifies this interest in looking into social media use in risk communication in Brunei Darussalam. keywords: communication; country; covid-19; distancing; health; media; narrative; people; public; risk; youth cache: cord-342360-d7qc20i4.txt plain text: cord-342360-d7qc20i4.txt item: #40 of 45 id: cord-342984-3qbvlbwo author: Allington, Daniel title: Health-protective behaviour, social media usage and conspiracy belief during the COVID-19 public health emergency date: 2020-06-09 words: 3858 flesch: 39 summary: All three studies found a negative relationship between COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs and COVID-19 health-protective behaviours, and a positive relationship between COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs and use of social media as a source of information about COVID-19. This raises the possibility that the circulation of COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs might be associated with similar risks. keywords: behaviours; beliefs; conspiracy; covid-19; health; media; relationship cache: cord-342984-3qbvlbwo.txt plain text: cord-342984-3qbvlbwo.txt item: #41 of 45 id: cord-346194-l8svzjp2 author: Nazir, Mehrab title: A Multidimensional Model of Public Health Approaches Against COVID-19 date: 2020-05-26 words: 4790 flesch: 36 summary: Social media has become an important source to broadcast awareness and information regarding control of infectious disease [3] . According to [4] , social media consists of different applications, including social networking sites, and blogs, that are founded on the scientific and ideological foundation of web 2.0 (for example, Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter) that allow users to make, share content, and participate in different activities. keywords: awareness; behavior; covid-19; disease; exchange; health; information; media; outbreak cache: cord-346194-l8svzjp2.txt plain text: cord-346194-l8svzjp2.txt item: #42 of 45 id: cord-351448-jowb5kfc author: Ganesh, Ragul title: The quality of online media reporting of celebrity suicide in India and its association with subsequent online suicide-related search behaviour among general population: An infodemiology study date: 2020-08-29 words: 5255 flesch: 42 summary: A study assessing the quality of suicide reporting in Indian print media found increase in prominence of suicide reports after the celebrity suicide (Harshe et al., 2016) . There only a few studies that have assessed the fidelity of suicide reporting in India, with almost of the studies having evaluated the quality of media reporting of suicide in general population and included only few print media newspapers. keywords: india; media; online; reporting; search; seeking; study; suicide cache: cord-351448-jowb5kfc.txt plain text: cord-351448-jowb5kfc.txt item: #43 of 45 id: cord-353041-qmpatq8m author: Han, Ruixia title: The Influence of Norm Perception on Pro-Environmental Behavior: A Comparison between the Moderating Roles of Traditional Media and Social Media date: 2020-09-30 words: 8269 flesch: 25 summary: Risk Anal Media use, environmental beliefs, self-efficacy, and pro-environmental behavior Environmental Concern, Patterns of Television Viewing, and Pro-Environmental Behaviors: Integrating Models of Media Consumption and Effects Causality analysis of media influence on environmental attitude, intention and behaviors leading to green purchasing The role of media exposure, social exposure and biospheric value orientation in the environmental attitude-intention-behavior model in adolescents Applying the Theory of Planned Behavior and Media Dependency Theory: Predictors of Public Pro-environmental Behavioral Intentions in Singapore Motivators of pro-environmental behavior: Examining the underlying processes in the influence of presumed media influence model The influence of presumed influence Motivating sustainable behavior. [43] points out that user-generated content (UGC) is more likely to gain public trust than official information, by activating pro-environmental norms, creating environmentally friendly online communities, and increasing public pro-environmental participation. keywords: behavior; environment; influence; information; injunctive; media; norm; people; perception; theory cache: cord-353041-qmpatq8m.txt plain text: cord-353041-qmpatq8m.txt item: #44 of 45 id: cord-355383-cqd2pa8c author: Olagoke, Ayokunle A. title: Exposure to coronavirus news on mainstream media: The role of risk perceptions and depression date: 2020-05-16 words: 2848 flesch: 38 summary: Exposure to COVID-19 news on mainstream media was measured by asking participants four questions starting with the stem statement How frequently do you get information on coronavirus from any of the following sources? To further investigate the relationship between exposure to COVID-19 news on mainstream media and depressive symptoms, multivariable analysis was calculated to test the relationship between the exposure and depressive symptoms. keywords: covid-19; exposure; health; mainstream; media; news; symptoms cache: cord-355383-cqd2pa8c.txt plain text: cord-355383-cqd2pa8c.txt item: #45 of 45 id: cord-356353-e6jb0sex author: Fourcade, Marion title: Loops, ladders and links: the recursivity of social and machine learning date: 2020-08-26 words: 14366 flesch: 35 summary: Information Corrupting the cyber-commons: Social media as a tool of autocratic stability Policy paradigms, social learning, and the state: The case of economic policymaking in Britain Perceiving persons and groups The architecture of community: Some new proposals on the social consequences of architectural and planning decisions Exposed: Desire and disobedience in the digital age Simmel, the police form and the limits of democratic policing Posthuman learning: Theories of social learning and socialization have explained how people come to assume behaviors and attitudes in ways not well captured by a focus on internal motivation or conscious deliberation (Miller and Dollard 1941; Bandura 1962; Mauss 1979; Elias 2000) . keywords: algorithms; data; human; hunger; instance; interactions; learning systems; life; machine learning; meaning; media; network; new; online; people; platforms; power; practices; process; self; social; society; systems; twitter; users; ways; world cache: cord-356353-e6jb0sex.txt plain text: cord-356353-e6jb0sex.txt