"Help! Can You Hear Me?": Understanding How Help-Seeking Posts are Overwhelmed on Social Media during a Natural Disaster
Changyang He, Yue Deng, Wenjie Yang, Bo Li

TL;DR
This study analyzes the overwhelm of help-seeking posts on social media during the 2021 Henan Floods, identifying challenges and strategies to improve help-seeking effectiveness through linguistic, community, and design insights.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive mixed-methods analysis of help-seeking post overwhelm during a natural disaster, proposing strategies to mitigate external and internal overloads.
Findings
Help-seeking posts face external and internal overwhelm challenges.
Certain linguistic strategies can improve help-seeking effectiveness.
Community norms and collaboration help prevent overwhelm.
Abstract
Posting help-seeking requests on social media has been broadly adopted by victims during natural disasters to look for urgent rescue and supplies. The help-seeking requests need to get sufficient public attention and be promptly routed to the intended target(s) for timely responses. However, the huge volume and diverse types of crisis-related posts on social media might limit help-seeking requests to receive adequate engagement and lead to their overwhelm. To understand this problem, this work proposes a mixed-methods approach to figure out the overwhelm situation of help-seeking requests, and individuals' and online communities' strategies to cope. We focused on the 2021 Henan Floods in China and collected 141,674 help-seeking posts with the keyword "Henan Rainstorm Mutual Aid" on a popular Chinese social media platform Weibo. The findings indicate that help-seeking posts confront…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDisaster Management and Resilience · Public Relations and Crisis Communication · Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining
