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      Public Response to Scientific Misconduct: Assessing Changes in Public Sentiment Toward the Stimulus-Triggered Acquisition of Pluripotency (STAP) Cell Case via Twitter

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          Abstract

          Background

          In this age of social media, any news—good or bad—has the potential to spread in unpredictable ways. Changes in public sentiment have the potential to either drive or limit investment in publicly funded activities, such as scientific research. As a result, understanding the ways in which reported cases of scientific misconduct shape public sentiment is becoming increasingly essential—for researchers and institutions, as well as for policy makers and funders. In this study, we thus set out to assess and define the patterns according to which public sentiment may change in response to reported cases of scientific misconduct. This study focuses on the public response to the events involved in a recent case of major scientific misconduct that occurred in 2014 in Japan—stimulus-triggered acquisition of pluripotency (STAP) cell case.

          Objectives

          The aims of this study were to determine (1) the patterns according to which public sentiment changes in response to scientific misconduct; (2) whether such measures vary significantly, coincident with major timeline events; and (3) whether the changes observed mirror the response patterns reported in the literature with respect to other classes of events, such as entertainment news and disaster reports.

          Methods

          The recent STAP cell scandal is used as a test case. Changes in the volume and polarity of discussion were assessed using a sampling of case-related Twitter data, published between January 28, 2014 and March 15, 2015. Rapidminer was used for text processing and the popular bag-of-words algorithm, SentiWordNet, was used in Rapidminer to calculate sentiment for each sample Tweet. Relative volume and sentiment was then assessed overall, month-to-month, and with respect to individual entities.

          Results

          Despite the ostensibly negative subject, average sentiment over the observed period tended to be neutral (−0.04); however, a notable downward trend ( y=−0.01 x +0.09; R ²=.45) was observed month-to-month. Notably polarized tweets accounted for less than one-third of sampled discussion: 17.49% (1656/9467) negative and 12.59% positive (1192/9467). Significant polarization was found in only 4 out of the 15 months covered, with significant variation month-to-month ( P<.001). Significant increases in polarization tended to coincide with increased discussion volume surrounding major events ( P<.001).

          Conclusions

          These results suggest that public opinion toward scientific research may be subject to the same sensationalist dynamics driving public opinion in other, consumer-oriented topics. The patterns in public response observed here, with respect to the STAP cell case, were found to be consistent with those observed in the literature with respect to other classes of news-worthy events on Twitter. Discussion was found to become strongly polarized only during times of increased public attention, and such increases tended to be driven primarily by negative reporting and reactionary commentary.

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          Most cited references85

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          Erratum: gene selection for cancer classification using support vector machines

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            Sentiment in Twitter events

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              Is the medium the message? Perceptions of and reactions to crisis communication via twitter, blogs and traditional media

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                JMIR Public Health Surveill
                JMIR Public Health Surveill
                JPH
                JMIR Public Health and Surveillance
                JMIR Publications (Toronto, Canada )
                2369-2960
                Apr-Jun 2017
                20 April 2017
                : 3
                : 2
                : e21
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Mie University Graduate School of Medicine TsuJapan
                Author notes
                Corresponding Author: Motomu Shimaoka shimaoka@ 123456doc.medic.mie-u.ac.jp
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9805-8440
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5764-2598
                Article
                v3i2e21
                10.2196/publichealth.5980
                5418527
                28428163
                bdb7aa6b-dc64-405c-82b1-5ad86e44f74c
                ©Alberto Gayle, Motomu Shimaoka. Originally published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (http://publichealth.jmir.org), 20.04.2017.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://publichealth.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.

                History
                : 17 May 2016
                : 21 August 2016
                : 11 November 2016
                : 7 March 2017
                Categories
                Original Paper
                Original Paper

                scientific misconduct,retraction of publication as a topic,mass media,social media,public opinion,public policy,data mining,publication,stem cells,japan

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