HIV is uncommon in most US
counties but travels quickly through vulnerable communities when it strikes.
Tracking behavior through social media may provide an unobtrusive, naturalistic
means of predicting HIV outbreaks and understanding the behavioral and
psychological factors that increase communities' risk.
General action goals, or
the motivation to engage in cognitive and motor activity, may support
protective health behavior (e.g., using condoms) or encourage activity
indiscriminately (e.g., risky sex), resulting in mixed health effects. We
explored these opposing hypotheses by regressing county-level HIV prevalence on
action language (e.g., work, plan) in over 150 million tweets mapped to US
counties. Controlling for demographic and structural predictors of HIV, more
active language was associated with lower HIV rates.
By leveraging language
used on social media to improve existing predictive models of geographic
variation in HIV, future targeted HIV-prevention interventions may have a
better chance of reaching high-risk communities before outbreaks occur.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/dLz3OU
By: Ireland ME1,2, Chen Q3,4, Schwartz HA3,4,5, Ungar LH3,4, Albarracin D3,4.
- 1Department of Psychological Sciences, Texas Tech University, MS 2051, Lubbock, TX, 79409, USA. molly.ireland@ttu.edu.
- 2University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL, USA. molly.ireland@ttu.edu.
- 3University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
- 4University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL, USA.
- 5Department of Computer Sciences, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY, USA.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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