TY - GEN
T1 - Hope Amid a Pandemic
T2 - World Conference on Information Systems and Technologies, WorldCIST 2021
AU - Chire-Saire, Josimar E.
AU - Mahmood, Khalid
AU - Oblitas-Cruz, Jimy
AU - Ahmed, Tanvir
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - As of November 17, 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has over 55 million reported cases, causing more than 1.3 million deaths. To prevent this pandemic, some countries placed severe resection in the form of full-scale lockdown, while others took a moderate approach, e.g., mass testing, prohibiting large-scale public gatherings, restricting travels. South America adopted primarily the lockdown strategies for not having a sophisticated public-health infrastructure. Since the social interactions between people are primarily affected by the lockdown; psychological distress, e.g., anxiety, stress, fear are supposedly affecting the South American population in a severe way. This paper aims to explore the impact of lockdown over the psychological aspect of the people of all the Spanish speaking South American capitals. We have utilized infodemiology approach by employing large-scale Twitter data-set over 33 million feeds in order to understand people’s interaction over the months of this on-going coronavirus pandemic. Our result is surprising: at the beginning of the pandemic, people demonstrated strong emotions (i.e. anxiety, worry, fear) that declined over time even though the actual pandemic is worsening by having more positive cases, and inflicting more deaths. Therefore, the result demonstrate that the South American population is adapting to this pandemic thus improving the overall psychological distress.
AB - As of November 17, 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has over 55 million reported cases, causing more than 1.3 million deaths. To prevent this pandemic, some countries placed severe resection in the form of full-scale lockdown, while others took a moderate approach, e.g., mass testing, prohibiting large-scale public gatherings, restricting travels. South America adopted primarily the lockdown strategies for not having a sophisticated public-health infrastructure. Since the social interactions between people are primarily affected by the lockdown; psychological distress, e.g., anxiety, stress, fear are supposedly affecting the South American population in a severe way. This paper aims to explore the impact of lockdown over the psychological aspect of the people of all the Spanish speaking South American capitals. We have utilized infodemiology approach by employing large-scale Twitter data-set over 33 million feeds in order to understand people’s interaction over the months of this on-going coronavirus pandemic. Our result is surprising: at the beginning of the pandemic, people demonstrated strong emotions (i.e. anxiety, worry, fear) that declined over time even though the actual pandemic is worsening by having more positive cases, and inflicting more deaths. Therefore, the result demonstrate that the South American population is adapting to this pandemic thus improving the overall psychological distress.
KW - COVID-19
KW - Coronavirus
KW - Google Trends
KW - Infoveillance
KW - Natural Language Processing
KW - Psychology
KW - Social media analysis
KW - South America
KW - Twitter
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85107368864&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-72651-5_27
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-72651-5_27
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85107368864
SN - 9783030726508
T3 - Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing
SP - 274
EP - 283
BT - Trends and Applications in Information Systems and Technologies
A2 - Rocha, Álvaro
A2 - Adeli, Hojjat
A2 - Dzemyda, Gintautas
A2 - Moreira, Fernando
A2 - Correia, Ana Maria Ramalho
Y2 - 30 March 2021 through 2 April 2021
ER -