Does Geo-co-location Matter? A Case Study of Public Health Conversations during COVID-19
Paiheng Xu, Louiqa Raschid, Vanessa Frias-Martinez

TL;DR
This study investigates how geographic co-location influences social media engagement during COVID-19, finding that localized interactions increase engagement and emotional content, which can inform public health messaging strategies.
Contribution
It demonstrates that geo-co-location significantly impacts engagement and lexical features in health-related social media conversations, combining statistical and LLM-based analyses.
Findings
Geo-co-location correlates with higher engagement.
Localized conversations contain more emotional and personal lexical features.
LLM analysis confirms the statistical findings.
Abstract
Social media platforms like Twitter (now X) have been pivotal in information dissemination and public engagement. The objective of our research is to analyze the effect of localized engagement on social media conversations. This study examines the impact of geographic co-location, as a proxy for localized engagement. Our research is grounded in a COVID-19 dataset. A key goal during the pandemic for public health experts was to encourage prosocial behavior that could impact local outcomes such as masking and social distancing. Given the importance of local news and guidance during COVID-19, we analyze the effect of localized engagement, between public health experts (PHEs) and the public, on social media. We analyze a Twitter Conversation dataset from January 2020 to November 2021, comprising over 19 K tweets from nearly five hundred PHEs, and 800 K replies from 350 K participants. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsData-Driven Disease Surveillance · Focus Groups and Qualitative Methods · Regional Socio-Economic Development Trends
