Modelling Infodemics on a Global Scale: A 30 Countries Study using Epidemiological and Social Listening Data
Edoardo Loru, Marco Delmastro, Francesco Gesualdo, Matteo Cinelli

TL;DR
This study models the dynamics of infodemics during COVID-19 across 30 countries, revealing key predictors like death rates and neighboring countries' epidemic burden, and proposes a taxonomy for understanding country-specific infodemic patterns.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive modeling framework that integrates online and offline data to analyze infodemic dynamics across diverse countries, advancing quantitative understanding.
Findings
New deaths strongly predict infodemic volume.
Neighboring countries' epidemic burden influences local infodemic levels.
Vaccine discussion impacts infodemic evolution.
Abstract
Infodemics are a threat to public health, arising from multiple interacting phenomena occurring both online and offline. The continuous feedback loops between the digital information ecosystem and offline contingencies make infodemics particularly challenging to define operationally, measure, and eventually model in quantitative terms. In this study, we present evidence of the effect of various epidemic-related variables on the dynamics of infodemics, using a robust modelling framework applied to data from 30 countries across diverse income groups. We use WHO COVID-19 surveillance data on new cases and deaths, vaccination data from the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker, infodemic data (volume of public conversations and social media content) from the WHO EARS platform, and Google Trends data to represent information demand. Our findings show that new deaths are the strongest…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMisinformation and Its Impacts · Social Media and Politics
